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NAMEType::Tiny::Manual::UsingWithOther - using Type::Tiny with Class::InsideOut, Params::Check, and Object::Accessor.MANUALThe antlers crew aren't the only object-oriented programming toolkits in Perl town. Although Type::Tiny might have been built with Moose, Mouse, and Moo in mind, it can be used with other toolkits.These toolkits are... well... hmm... okay... they exist. If you are starting a new project, there's very little reason not to use Class::Tiny, Moo, or Moose. So you're probably okay to skip this part of the fine manual and go straight to Type::Tiny::Manual::UsingWithTestMore. Class::InsideOutYou want Class::InsideOut 1.13 or above, which has support for blessed and overloaded objects (including Type::Tiny type constraints) for the "get_hook" and "set_hook" options.package Person { use Class::InsideOut qw( public ); use Types::Standard qw( Str Int ); use Types::Common::Numeric qw( PositiveInt ); use Type::Params qw( compile ); # Type checks are really easy. # Just supply the type as a set hook. public name => my %_name, { set_hook => Str, }; # Define a type that silently coerces negative values # to positive. It's silly, but it works as an example! my $Years = PositiveInt->plus_coercions(Int, q{ abs($_) }); # Coercions are more annoying, but possible. public age => my %_age, { set_hook => sub { $_ = $Years->assert_coerce($_) }, }; # Parameter checking for methods is as expected. sub get_older { state $check = compile( $Years ); my $self = shift; my ($years) = $check->(@_); $self->_set_age($self->age + $years); } } Params::Check and Object::AccessorThe Params::Check "allow()" function, the "allow" option for the Params::Check "check()" function, and the input validation mechanism for Object::Accessor all work in the same way, which is basically a limited pure-Perl implementation of the smart match operator. While this doesn't directly support Type::Tiny constraints, it does support coderefs. You can use Type::Tiny's "compiled_check" method to obtain a suitable coderef.Param::Check example: my $tmpl = { name => { allow => Str->compiled_check }, age => { allow => Int->compiled_check }, }; check($tmpl, { name => "Bob", age => 32 }) or die Params::Check::last_error(); Object::Accessor example: my $obj = Object::Accessor->new; $obj->mk_accessors( { name => Str->compiled_check }, { age => Int->compiled_check }, ); Caveat: Object::Accessor doesn't die when a value fails to meet its type constraint; instead it outputs a warning to STDERR. This behaviour can be changed by setting "$Object::Accessor::FATAL = 1". Class::StructThis is proof-of-concept of how Type::Tiny can be used to constrain attributes for Class::Struct. It's probably not a good idea to use this in production as it slows down "UNIVERSAL::isa" globally.use Types::Standard -types; use Class::Struct; { my %MAP; my $orig_isa = \&UNIVERSAL::isa; *UNIVERSAL::isa = sub { return $MAP{$1}->check($_[0]) if $_[1] =~ /^CLASSSTRUCT::TYPETINY::(.+)$/ && exists $MAP{$1}; goto $orig; }; my $orig_dn = \&Type::Tiny::display_name; *Type::Tiny::display_name = sub { if (caller(1) eq 'Class::Struct') { $MAP{$_[0]{uniq}} = $_[0]; return "CLASSSTRUCT::TYPETINY::".$_[0]{uniq}; } goto $orig_dn; }; } struct Person => [ name => Str, age => Int ]; my $bob = Person->new( name => "Bob", age => 21, ); $bob->name("Robert"); # okay $bob->name([]); # dies NEXT STEPSHere's your next step:
AUTHORToby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.COPYRIGHT AND LICENCEThis software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017-2021 by Toby Inkster.This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIESTHIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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