NAME

Moose::Cookbook::Recipe4 - Subtypes, and modeling a simple Company class hierarchy

SYNOPSIS

  package Address;
  use Moose;
  use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
  
  use Locale::US;
  use Regexp::Common 'zip';
  
  my $STATES = Locale::US->new;
  
  subtype USState 
      => as Str
      => where {
          (exists $STATES->{code2state}{uc($_)} || 
           exists $STATES->{state2code}{uc($_)})
      };
      
  subtype USZipCode 
      => as Value
      => where {
          /^$RE{zip}{US}{-extended => 'allow'}$/            
      };
  
  has 'street'   => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str');
  has 'city'     => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str');
  has 'state'    => (is => 'rw', isa => 'USState');
  has 'zip_code' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'USZipCode');   
  
  package Company;
  use Moose;
  use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
  
  has 'name'      => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', required => 1);
  has 'address'   => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Address'); 
  has 'employees' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'ArrayRef[Employee]');    
  
  sub BUILD {
      my ($self, $params) = @_;
      if ($params->{employees}) {
          foreach my $employee (@{$params->{employees}}) {
              $employee->company($self);
          }
      }
  }
  
  after 'employees' => sub {
      my ($self, $employees) = @_;
      if (defined $employees) {
          foreach my $employee (@{$employees}) {
              $employee->company($self);
          }            
      }
  };  
  
  package Person;
  use Moose;
  
  has 'first_name'     => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', required => 1);
  has 'last_name'      => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', required => 1);       
  has 'middle_initial' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', 
                           predicate => 'has_middle_initial');  
  has 'address'        => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Address');
  
  sub full_name {
      my $self = shift;
      return $self->first_name . 
            ($self->has_middle_initial ? 
                ' ' . $self->middle_initial . '. ' 
                : 
                ' ') .
             $self->last_name;
  }
    
  package Employee;
  use Moose;  
  
  extends 'Person';
  
  has 'title'   => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', required => 1);
  has 'company' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Company', weak_ref => 1);  
  
  override 'full_name' => sub {
      my $self = shift;
      super() . ', ' . $self->title
  };

DESCRIPTION

In this recipe we introduce the subtype keyword, and show how it can be useful for specifying type constraints without building an entire class to represent them. We will also show how this feature can be used to leverage the usefulness of CPAN modules. In addition to this, we will introduce another attribute option.

Let's first look at the subtype feature. In the Address class we have defined two subtypes. The first subtype uses the Locale::US module, which provides two hashes which can be used to perform existential checks for state names and their two letter state codes. It is a very simple and very useful module, and perfect for use in a subtype constraint.

  my $STATES = Locale::US->new;  
  subtype USState 
      => as Str
      => where {
          (exists $STATES->{code2state}{uc($_)} || 
           exists $STATES->{state2code}{uc($_)})
      };

Because we know that states will be passed to us as strings, we can make USState a subtype of the built-in type constraint Str. This will ensure that anything which is a USState will also pass as a Str. Next, we create a constraint specializer using the where keyword. The value being checked against in the where clause can be found in the $_ variable (1). Our constraint specializer will then check whether the given string is either a state name or a state code. If the string meets this criteria, then the constraint will pass, otherwise it will fail. We can now use this as we would any built-in constraint, like so:

  has 'state' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'USState');

The state accessor will now check all values against the USState constraint, thereby only allowing valid state names or state codes to be stored in the state slot.

The next subtype does pretty much the same thing using the Regexp::Common module, and is used as the constraint for the zip_code slot.

  subtype USZipCode 
      => as Value
      => where {
          /^$RE{zip}{US}{-extended => 'allow'}$/            
      };

Using subtypes can save a lot of unnecessary abstraction by not requiring you to create many small classes for these relatively simple values. They also allow you to reuse the same constraints in a number of classes (thereby avoiding duplication), since all type constraints are stored in a global registry and always accessible to has.

With these two subtypes and some attributes, we have defined as much as we need for a basic Address class. Next, we define a basic Company class, which itself has an address. As we saw in earlier recipes, we can use the Address type constraint that Moose automatically created for us:

  has 'address' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Address');

A company also needs a name, so we define that as well:

  has 'name' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', required => 1);

Here we introduce another attribute option, the required option. This option tells Moose that name is a required parameter in the Company constructor, and that the name accessor cannot accept an undefined value for the slot. The result is that name will always have a value.

The next attribute option is not actually new, but a new variant of options we have already introduced:

  has 'employees' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'ArrayRef[Employee]');

Here, we are passing a more complex string to the isa option, we are passing a container type constraint. Container type constraints can either be ArrayRef or HashRef with a contained type given inside the square brackets. This basically checks that all the values in the ARRAY ref are instances of the Employee class.

This will ensure that our employees will all be of the correct type. However, the Employee object (which we will see in a moment) also maintains a reference to its associated Company. In order to maintain this relationship (and preserve the referential integrity of our objects), we need to perform some processing of the employees over and above that of the type constraint check. This is accomplished in two places. First we need to be sure that any employees array passed to the constructor is properly initialized. For this we can use the BUILD method (2):

  sub BUILD {
      my ($self, $params) = @_;
      if ($params->{employees}) {
          foreach my $employee (@{$params->{employees}}) {
              $employee->company($self);
          }
      }
  }

The BUILD method will be executed after the initial type constraint check, so we can simply perform a basic existential check on the employees param here, and assume that if it does exist, it is both an ARRAY ref and contains only instances of Employee.

The next aspect we need to address is the employees read/write accessor (see the employees attribute declaration above). This accessor will correctly check the type constraint, but we need to extend it with some additional processing. For this we use an after method modifier, like so:

  after 'employees' => sub {
      my ($self, $employees) = @_;
      if (defined $employees) {
          foreach my $employee (@{$employees}) {
              $employee->company($self);
          }            
      }
  };

Again, as with the BUILD method, we know that the type constraint check has already happened, so we can just check for defined-ness on the $employees argument.

At this point, our Company class is complete. Next comes our Person class and its subclass, the previously mentioned Employee class.

The Person class should be obvious to you at this point. It has a few required attributes, and the middle_initial slot has an additional predicate method (which we saw in the previous recipe with the BinaryTree class).

Next, the Employee class, which should also be pretty obvious at this point. It requires a title, and maintains a weakened reference to a Company instance. The only new item, which we have seen before in examples, but never in the recipe itself, is the override method modifier:

  override 'full_name' => sub {
      my $self = shift;
      super() . ', ' . $self->title
  };

This just tells Moose that I am intentionally overriding the superclass full_name method here, and adding the value of the title slot at the end of the employee's full name.

And that's about it.

Once again, as with all the other recipes, you can go about using these classes like any other Perl 5 class. A more detailed example of usage can be found in t/000_recipes/004_recipe.t.

CONCLUSION

This recipe was intentionally longer and more complex to illustrate both how easily Moose classes can interact (using class type constraints, etc.) and the sheer density of information and behaviors which Moose can pack into a relatively small amount of typing. Ponder for a moment how much more code a non-Moose plain old Perl 5 version of this recipe would have been (including all the type constraint checks, weak references, and so on).

And of course, this recipe also introduced the subtype keyword, and its usefulness within the Moose toolkit. In the next recipe we will focus more on subtypes, and introduce the idea of type coercion as well.

FOOTNOTES

(1)

The value being checked is also passed as the first argument to the where block as well, so it can also be accessed as $_[0] as well.

(2)

The BUILD method is called by Moose::Object::BUILDALL, which is called by Moose::Object::new. BUILDALL will climb the object inheritance graph and call the appropriate BUILD methods in the correct order.

AUTHOR

Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2006-2008 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.