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Moose::Manual::MOP(3)                User Contributed Perl Documentation               Moose::Manual::MOP(3)



NAME
       Moose::Manual::MOP - The Moose (and Class::MOP) meta API

VERSION
       version 2.0205

INTRODUCTION
       Moose provides a powerful introspection API built on top of "Class::MOP". "MOP" stands for Meta-Object MetaObject
       Object Protocol. In plainer English, a MOP is an API for performing introspection on classes,
       attributes, methods, and so on.

       In fact, it is "Class::MOP" that provides many of Moose's core features, including attributes,
       before/after/around method modifiers, and immutability. In most cases, Moose takes an existing
       "Class::MOP" class and subclasses it to add additional features. Moose also adds some entirely new
       features of its own, such as roles, the augment modifier, and types.

       If you're interested in the MOP, it's important to know about "Class::MOP" so you know what docs to
       read. Often, the introspection method that you're looking for is defined in a "Class::MOP" class,
       rather than Moose itself.

       The MOP provides more than just read-only introspection. It also lets you add attributes and methods,
       apply roles, and much more. In fact, all of the declarative Moose sugar is simply a thin layer on top
       of the MOP API.

       If you want to write Moose extensions, you'll need to learn some of the MOP API. The introspection
       methods are also handy if you want to generate docs or inheritance graphs, or do some other runtime
       reflection.

       This document is not a complete reference for the meta API. We're just going to cover some of the
       highlights, and give you a sense of how it all works. To really understand it, you'll have to read a
       lot of other docs, and possibly even dig into the Moose guts a bit.

GETTING STARTED
       The usual entry point to the meta API is through a class's metaclass object, which is a
       Moose::Meta::Class. This is available by calling the "meta" method on a class or object:

         package User;

         use Moose;

         my $meta = __PACKAGE__->meta;

       The "meta" method is added to a class when it uses Moose.

       You can also use "Class::MOP::Class->initialize($name)" to get a metaclass object for any class. This
       is safer than calling "$class->meta" when you're not sure that the class has a meta method.

       The "Class::MOP::Class->initialize" constructor will return an existing metaclass if one has already
       been created (via Moose or some other means). If it hasn't, it will return a new "Class::MOP::Class"
       object. This will work for classes that use Moose, meta API classes, and classes which don't use
       Moose at all.

USING THE METACLASS OBJECT
       The metaclass object can tell you about a class's attributes, methods, roles, parents, and more. For
       example, to look at all of the class's attributes:

         for my $attr ( $meta->get_all_attributes ) {
             print $attr->name, "\n";
         }

       The "get_all_attributes" method is documented in "Class::MOP::Class". For Moose-using classes, it
       returns a list of Moose::Meta::Attribute objects for attributes defined in the class and its parents.

       You can also get a list of methods:

         for my $method ( $meta->get_all_methods ) {
             print $method->fully_qualified_name, "\n";
         }

       Now we're looping over a list of Moose::Meta::Method objects. Note that some of these objects may
       actually be a subclass of Moose::Meta::Method, as Moose uses different classes to represent wrapped
       methods, delegation methods, constructors, etc.

       We can look at a class's parent classes and subclasses:

         for my $class ( $meta->linearized_isa ) {
             print "$class\n";
         }

         for my $subclass ( $meta->subclasses ) {
             print "$subclass\n";
         }

       Note that both these methods return class names, not metaclass objects.

ALTERING CLASSES WITH THE MOP
       The metaclass object can change the class directly, by adding attributes, methods, etc.

       As an example, we can add a method to a class:

         $meta->add_method( 'say' => sub { print @_, "\n" } );

       Or an attribute:

         $meta->add_attribute( 'size' => ( is => 'rw', isa  => 'Int' ) );

       Obviously, this is much more cumbersome than using Perl syntax or Moose sugar for defining methods
       and attributes, but this API allows for very powerful extensions.

       You might remember that we've talked about making classes immutable elsewhere in the manual. This is
       a good practice. However, once a class is immutable, calling any of these update methods will throw
       an exception.

       You can make a class mutable again simply by calling "$meta->make_mutable". Once you're done changing
       it, you can restore immutability by calling "$meta->make_immutable".

       However, the most common use for this part of the meta API is as part of Moose extensions. These
       extensions should assume that they are being run before you make a class immutable.

GOING FURTHER
       If you're interested in extending Moose, we recommend reading all of the "Meta" and "Extending"
       recipes in the Moose::Cookbook. Those recipes show various practical applications of the MOP.

       If you'd like to write your own extensions, one of the best ways to learn more about this is to look
       at other similar extensions to see how they work. You'll probably also need to read various API docs,
       including the docs for the various "Moose::Meta::*" and "Class::MOP::*" classes.

       Finally, we welcome questions on the Moose mailing list and IRC. Information on the mailing list,
       IRC, and more references can be found in the Moose.pm docs.

AUTHOR
       Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
       This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Infinity Interactive, Inc..

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.



perl v5.12.5                                     2011-09-06                            Moose::Manual::MOP(3)

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