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NAME

MooX::Options - add option keywords to your object (Mo/Moo/Mouse/Moose and any others)

VERSION

version 2.1

MooX::Options

Use Getopt::Long::Descritive to provide command line option for your Mo/Moo/Mouse/Moose Object.

This module will add "option" which act as "has" but support additional feature for getopt.

You will have "new_with_options" to instanciate new object for command line.

METHOD

IMPORT

The import method can take option :

%options
creation_chain_method

call this method after parsing option, default : new

creation_method_name

name of new method to handle option, default : new_with_options

option_chain_method

call this method to create the attribute, default : has

option_method_name

name of keyword you want to use to create your option, default : option

it will create ${option_method_name}_usage too, ex: option_usage($exit_code, @{additional messages})

nofilter

don't filter extra params for MooX::Options before calling chain_method

it is usefull if you want to use this params for something else

flavour

pass extra arguments for Getopt::Long::Descriptive. it is usefull if you want to configure Getopt::Long.

    use MooX::Options flavour => [qw( pass_through )];

Any flavour is pass to Getopt::Long as a configuration, check the doc to see what is possible.

protect_argv

by default, argv is protected. if you want to do something else on it, use this option and it will change the real argv.

    use MooX::Options protect_argv => 0;

USAGE

First of all, I use Getopt::Long::Descriptive. Everything will be pass to the programs, more specially the format.

    package t;
    use Moo;
    use MooX::Options;
    
    option 'test' => (is => 'ro');
    
    1;

    my $t = t->new_with_options(); #parse @ARGV
    my $o = t->new_with_options(test => 'override'); #parse ARGV and override any value with the params here

The keyword "option" work exactly like the keyword "has" and take extra argument of Getopt.

Keyword 'option_usage'

It display the usage message and return the exit code

    option_usage(1, "str is not valid");

Params :

$exit_code

Exit code after displaying the usage message

@messages

Additional message to display before the usage message

Ex: str is not valid

Keyword 'new_with_options'

It will parse your command line params and your inline params, validate and call the 'new' method.

You can override the command line params :

Ex:

    @ARGV=('--str=ko');
    t->new_with_options(str => 'ok');
    t->str; #ok

Keyword 'option' : EXTRA ARGS

doc

Specified the documentation for the attribute

documentation

Specified the documentation for the attribute. It is usefull if you chain with other module like MooseX::App::Cmd that use this attribute.

If doc attribute is defined, this one will be ignored.

required

Specified if the attribute is needed

format

Format of the params. It is the same as Getopt::Long::Descriptive.

Example :

   i : integer
   i@: array of integer
   s : string
   s@: array of string
   f : float value

by default, it's a boolean value.

Take a look of available format with Getopt::Long::Descriptive.

negativable

add the attribute "!" to the name. It will allow negative params.

Ex :

  test --quiet
  => quiet = 1

  test --quiet --no-quiet
  => quiet = 0
repeatable

add the attribute "@" to the name. It will allow repeatable params.

Ex :

  test --verbose
  => verbose = 1

  test --verbose --verbose
  => verbose = 2

it is advisable to use a "default" option on the attribute for repeatable params so that they behave as arrays "out of the box" when used outside of command line context.

Ex: package t; use Moo; use MooX::Options;

    option foo => (is => 'rw', format => 's@', default => sub { [] });
    option bar => (is => 'rw', format => 'i@', default => sub { [] });

    # this now works as expected and you will no longer see
    # "Can't use an undefined value as an ARRAY reference"
    my $t = t->new;
    push @{ $t->foo }, 'abc123';

    1;
autosplit

auto split args to generate multiple value. It implie "repeatable". autosplit take the separator value, ex: ",".

Ex :

    package t;
    use Moo;
    use MooX::Options;
    
    option test => (is => 'ro', format => 'i@', autosplit => ',');
    #same as : option test => (is => 'ro', format => 'i', autosplit => ',');
    1;
    
    @ARGV=('--test=1,2,3,4');
    my $t = t->new_with_options;
    t->test # [1,2,3,4]

I automatically take the quoted as a group separator value

    package str;
    use Moo;
    use MooX::Options;
    option test => (is => 'ro', format => 's', repeatable => 1, autosplit => ',');
    1;
    
    @ARGV=('--test=a,b,"c,d",e');
    my $t = str->new_with_options;
    t->test # ['a','b','c,d','e']
short

give short name of an attribute.

Ex :

    package t;
    use Moo;
    use MooX::Options;
    
    option 'verbose' => (is => 'ro', repeatable => 1, short => 'v');
    
    1;
    @ARGV=('-vvv');
    my $t = t->new_with_options;
    t->verbose # 3

THANKS

Matt S. Trout (mst) <mst@shadowcat.co.uk> : For his patience and advice.

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://github.com/celogeek/MooX-Options/issues

When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.

AUTHOR

celogeek <me@celogeek.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2011 by celogeek <me@celogeek.com>.

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