NAME

Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe1 - Welcome to the meta world (Why Go Meta?)

SUMMARY

You might want to read Moose::Manual::MOP if you haven't done so yet.

If you've ever thought "Moose is great, but I wish it did X differently", then you've gone meta. The meta recipes demonstrate how to change and extend the way Moose works by extending and overriding how the meta classes (Moose::Meta::Class, Moose::Meta::Attribute, etc) work.

The metaclass API is a set of classes that describe classes, roles, attributes, etc. The metaclass API lets you ask questions about a class, like "what attributes does it have?", or "what roles does the class do?"

The metaclass system also lets you make changes to a class, for example by adding new methods or attributes.

The interface presented by Moose.pm (has, with, extends) is just a thin layer of syntactic sugar over the underlying metaclass system.

By extending and changing how this metaclass system works, you can create your own Moose variant.

Examples

Let's say that you want to additional properties to attributes. Specifically, we want to add a "label" property to each attribute, so we can write My::Class->meta()->get_attribute('size')->label(). The first two recipes show two different ways to do this, one with a full meta-attribute subclass, and the other with an attribute trait.

You might also want to add additional properties to your metaclass. For example, if you were writing an ORM based on Moose, you could associate a table name with each class via the class's metaclass object, letting you write My::Class->meta()->table_name().

SEE ALSO

Many of the MooseX modules on CPAN implement metaclass extensions. A couple good examples include MooseX::Singleton and MooseX::AttributeHelpers. For a more complex example see Fey::ORM or Reaction.

AUTHOR

Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org<gt>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2009 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.

http://www.iinteractive.com

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