Mouse(3pm)

NAME

Mouse - Moose minus the antlers

VERSION

This document describes Mouse version 0.64

SYNOPSIS

package Point;
use Mouse; # automatically turns on strict and warnings

has 'x' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');
has 'y' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');

sub clear {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->x(0);
    $self->y(0);
}


__PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable();

package Point3D;
use Mouse;

extends 'Point';

has 'z' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');

after 'clear' => sub {
    my $self = shift;
    $self->z(0);
};

__PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable();

DESCRIPTION

Moose is wonderful. Use Moose instead of Mouse.

Unfortunately, Moose has a compile-time penalty. Though significant
progress has been made over the years, the compile time penalty is a
non-starter for some very specific applications. If you are writing a
command-line application or CGI script where startup time is essential, you may not be able to use Moose. We recommend that you instead use
HTTP::Engine and FastCGI for the latter, if possible.

Mouse aims to alleviate this by providing a subset of Moose's
functionality, faster.

We're also going as light on dependencies as possible. Mouse currently has no dependencies except for testing modules.
MOOSE COMPATIBILITY
Compatibility with Moose has been the utmost concern. The sugary
interface is highly compatible with Moose. Even the error messages are taken from Moose. The Mouse code just runs the test suite 4x faster.
The idea is that, if you need the extra power, you should be able to
run "s/Mouse/Moose/g" on your codebase and have nothing break. To that end, we have written Any::Moose which will act as Mouse unless Moose is loaded, in which case it will act as Moose. Since Mouse is a little
sloppier than Moose, if you run into weird errors, it would be worth
running:

ANY_MOOSE=Moose perl your-script.pl
to see if the bug is caused by Mouse. Moose's diagnostics and
validation are also better.
See also Mouse::Spec for compatibility and incompatibility with Moose.
MouseX
Please don't copy MooseX code to MouseX. If you need extensions, you
really should upgrade to Moose. We don't need two parallel sets of
extensions!
If you really must write a Mouse extension, please contact the Moose
mailing list or #moose on IRC beforehand.

KEYWORDS

"$object->meta -> Mouse::Meta::Class"
Returns this class' metaclass instance.
"extends superclasses"
Sets this class' superclasses.
"before (method|methods|regexp) => CodeRef"
Installs a "before" method modifier. See "before" in Moose.
"after (method|methods|regexp) => CodeRef"
Installs an "after" method modifier. See "after" in Moose.
"around (method|methods|regexp) => CodeRef"
Installs an "around" method modifier. See "around" in Moose.
"has (name|names) => parameters"
Adds an attribute (or if passed an arrayref of names, multiple
attributes) to this class. Options:
"is => ro|rw|bare"
The is option accepts either rw (for read/write), ro (for read only) or bare (for nothing). These will create either a read/write accessor or a read-only accessor respectively, using the same name as the $name of the attribute.
If you need more control over how your accessors are named, you can use the "reader", "writer" and "accessor" options, however if you
use those, you won't need the is option.
"isa => TypeName | ClassName"
Provides type checking in the constructor and accessor. The
following types are supported. Any unknown type is taken to be a
class check (e.g. "isa => 'DateTime'" would accept only DateTime
objects).

Any Item Bool Undef Defined Value Num Int Str ClassName
Ref ScalarRef ArrayRef HashRef CodeRef RegexpRef GlobRef
FileHandle Object
For more documentation on type constraints, see
Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints.
"does => RoleName"
This will accept the name of a role which the value stored in this attribute is expected to have consumed.
"coerce => Bool"
This will attempt to use coercion with the supplied type constraint to change the value passed into any accessors or constructors. You must have supplied a type constraint in order for this to work. See Moose::Cookbook::Basics::Recipe5 for an example.
"required => Bool"
Whether this attribute is required to have a value. If the
attribute is lazy or has a builder, then providing a value for the attribute in the constructor is optional.
"init_arg => Str | Undef"
Allows you to use a different key name in the constructor. If
undef, the attribute can't be passed to the constructor.
"default => Value | CodeRef"
Sets the default value of the attribute. If the default is a
coderef, it will be invoked to get the default value. Due to quirks of Perl, any bare reference is forbidden, you must wrap the
reference in a coderef. Otherwise, all instances will share the
same reference.
"lazy => Bool"
If specified, the default is calculated on demand instead of in the constructor.
"predicate => Str"
Lets you specify a method name for installing a predicate method,
which checks that the attribute has a value. It will not invoke a
lazy default or builder method.
"clearer => Str"
Lets you specify a method name for installing a clearer method,
which clears the attribute's value from the instance. On the next
read, lazy or builder will be invoked.
"handles => HashRef|ArrayRef|Regexp"
Lets you specify methods to delegate to the attribute. ArrayRef
forwards the given method names to method calls on the attribute.
HashRef maps local method names to remote method names called on
the attribute. Other forms of "handles", such as RoleName and
CodeRef, are not yet supported.
"weak_ref => Bool"
Lets you automatically weaken any reference stored in the
attribute.
Use of this feature requires Scalar::Util!
"trigger => CodeRef"
Any time the attribute's value is set (either through the accessor or the constructor), the trigger is called on it. The trigger
receives as arguments the instance, the new value, and the
attribute instance.
"builder => Str"
Defines a method name to be called to provide the default value of the attribute. "builder => 'build_foo'" is mostly equivalent to
"default => sub { $_[0]->build_foo }".
"auto_deref => Bool"
Allows you to automatically dereference ArrayRef and HashRef
attributes in list context. In scalar context, the reference is
returned (NOT the list length or bucket status). You must specify
an appropriate type constraint to use auto_deref.
"lazy_build => Bool"
Automatically define the following options:

has $attr => (
# ...
lazy => 1
builder => "_build_$attr",
clearer => "clear_$attr",
predicate => "has_$attr",
);
"confess(message) -> BOOM"
"confess" in Carp for your convenience.
"blessed(value) -> ClassName | undef"
"blessed" in Scalar::Util for your convenience.

MISC

import
Importing Mouse will default your class' superclass list to
Mouse::Object. You may use "extends" to replace the superclass list.
unimport
Please unimport Mouse ("no Mouse") so that if someone calls one of the keywords (such as "extends") it will break loudly instead breaking
subtly.

SOURCE CODE ACCESS

We have a public git repository:
git clone git://git.moose.perl.org/Mouse.git

DEPENDENCIES

Perl 5.6.2 or later.

SEE ALSO

Mouse::Spec

Moose

Moose::Manual

Moose::Cookbook

Class::MOP

AUTHORS

Shawn M Moore <sartak at gmail.com>

Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch at woobling.org>

tokuhirom

Yappo

wu-lee

Goro Fuji (gfx) <gfuji at cpan.org>

with plenty of code borrowed from Class::MOP and Moose

BUGS

All complex software has bugs lurking in it, and this module is no
exception. Please report any bugs to "bug-mouse at rt.cpan.org", or
through the web interface at
<http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Mouse>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (c) 2008-2010 Infinity Interactive, Inc.

http://www.iinteractive.com/

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