NAME

Synopsis 12: Objects

AUTHOR

Larry Wall <larry@wall.org>

VERSION

Maintainer: Larry Wall <larry@wall.org>
Date: 27 Oct 2004
Last Modified: 22 Nov 2005
Number: 12
Version: 7

Overview

This synopsis summarizes Apocalypse 12, which discusses object-oriented programming.

Classes

A class is a module declared with the class keyword. As with modules, the public storage, interface, and name of the class is represented by a package and its name, which is usually (but not necessarily) a global name.

Taken as an object, a class represents all of the possible values of its type, and the class object can thus be used as a proxy for any "real" object of that type in calculating what a generic object of that type can do. The class object is an Object, but it is not a Class, because there is no mandatory Class class in Perl 6. We wish to support both class-based and prototype-based OO programming. So all metaprogramming is done through the current object's .meta object, which can delegate metaprogramming to any metamodel it likes. However, by default, objects derived from Object support a fairly standard class-based model.

There are two basic class declaration syntaxes:

class Foo;		# rest of file is class definition
...

class Bar {...}	# block is class definition

The first form is allowed only as the first declaration in a compilation unit (that is, file or eval string).

In either case, the code represented by ... executes at compile time as the body of a method of the metaclass, which is responsible for interpreting the keywords of the class definition. (And since a class is also a module, it also handles any module-oriented keywords. You can export subs from a class at "use" time, for instance.)

Classes are primarily for instance management, not code reuse. Consider using roles when you simply want to factor out common code.

Perl 6 supports multiple inheritance, anonymous classes, and autoboxing.

All public method calls are "virtual" in the C++ sense. More surprisingly, any class name mentioned in a method is also considered virtual, that is, polymorphic on the actual type of the object.

You may derive from any built-in type, but the derivation of a low-level type like int may only add behaviors, not change the representation. Use composition and/or delegation to change the representation.

Since there are no barewords in Perl 6, bare class names must be predeclared. You can predeclare a stub class and fill it in later just as you would a subroutine. Alternately, you can define a local class or type variable using the :: type sigil. In an rvalue context the :: prefix is a no-op, but in a declarational context, it binds a new type name within its declared scope.

Without a my or other scoping declarator, a bare class declarator declares an our declarator, that is, a name within the current package. Since class files begin parsing in the * (GLOBAL) package, the first class declaration in the file installs itself as a global name, and subsequent declarations then install themselves into the current class rather than the global package.

Hence, to declare an inner class in the current package (or module, or class), use our class or just class. To declare a lexically scoped class, use my class. Class names are always searched for from innermost scopes to outermost. As with an initial ::, the presence of a :: within the name does not imply globalness (unlike in Perl 5). So the outward search can look in children of the searched namespaces.

Class traits are set using is:

class MyStruct is rw {...}

An "isa" is just a trait that happens to be another class:

class Dog is Mammal {...}

MI is specified with multiple is modifiers:

class Dog is Mammal is Pet {...}

Roles use does instead of is:

class Dog is Mammal does Pet {...}

You may put these inside as well:

    class Dog {
	is Mammal;
	does Pet;
	...
    }

Every object (including any class object) delegates to an instance of its metaclass. You can get at the metaclass of any object via the .meta method. A class object is just considered an "empty" instance in Perl 6. It differs from an instance object not by having a different type rather in the extent to which it is defined. Some class objects may tell you that they are defined, while others may tell you that they are undefined. That's up to the object, and depends on how the metaclass chooses to dispatch the .defined method.

Classes are open and non-final by default, but may easily be closed or finalized not by themselves but by the entire application, provided nobody issued an explicit compile-time request that the class stay open or non-final. (Or a site policy could close any applications that use the policy.) Platforms that do dynamic loading of sub-applications probably don't want to close or finalize classes wholesale, however.

Roles take on some of the compile-time function of closed classes, so you should probably use those instead anyway.

A private class can be declared using my; most privacy issues are handled with lexical scoping in Perl 6. The fact that importation is lexical by default also means that any names your class imports are also private by default.

Methods

Methods are subroutines declared in a class with the method keyword:

method doit ($a, $b, $c) { ... }
method doit ($self: $a, $b, $c) { ... }
method doit (MyName $self: $a, $b, $c) { ... }
method doit (::?CLASS $self: $a, $b, $c) { ... }

Declaration of the invocant is optional. You need not declare its type, since the lexical class of the invocant is known in any event because methods must be declared in the class of the invocant, though of course the actual (virtual) type may be a derived type of the lexical type. You could declare a more restrictive type, but that would probably be a bad thing for proper polymorphism. You may explicitly type the invocant with the lexical type, but any check for that will be optimized away. (The current lexically-determined class may always be named as ::?CLASS even in anonymous classes or roles.)

Private methods are declared using my:

my method think (Brain $self: $thought)

(Such methods are completely invisible to the ordinary method dispatch system, and are in fact called with a different syntax that uses ! in place of the . character. See below.)

To call an ordinary method with ordinary single-dispatch semantics, use either the dot notation or indirect object notation:

$obj.doit(1,2,3)
doit $obj: 1,2,3

Indirect object notation now requires a colon after the invocant if there are any arguments. If there are no arguments and you omit the colon, the notation is parsed either as a named unary operator or a list operator with one argument. In any case, all of these come out to the same thing:

$handle.close
close($handle)
close $handle:
close $handle

Dot notation can omit the invocant if it's in $_:

.doit(1,2,3)

It can use a simple scalar variable for the method name:

$obj.$methodname(1,2,3)

You must use a special syntax to call a private method:

$mybrain!think($pinky)

Parentheses (or a colon) are required on the dot notation if there are any arguments (not counting adverbial arguments). There may be no space between the method name and the left parenthesis unless you use the dot form of parentheses:

.doit	# okay, no arguments
.doit()	# okay, no arguments
.doit ()	# ILLEGAL (two terms in a row)
.doit.()	# okay, no arguments, same as .doit()
.doit .()	# okay, no arguments, same as .doit()

However, you can turn extend any of the legal forms above into a list operator by appending a colon:

.doit: 1,2,3	# okay, three arguments
.doit(1): 2,3	# okay, one argument plus list
.doit (): 1,2,3	# ILLEGAL (two terms in a row)
.doit.(1): 2,3	# okay, same as .doit(1,2,3)
.doit .(1,2): 3	# okay, same as .doit(1,2,3)

In particular, this allows us to pass a closure in addition to the "normal" arguments:

.doit: { $^a <=> $^b }		# okay
.doit(): { $^a <=> $^b }		# okay
.doit(1,2,3): { $^a <=> $^b }	# okay

In case of ambiguity between indirect object notation and dot form, the nearest thing wins:

dothis $obj.dothat: 1,2,3

means

dothis ($obj.dothat(1,2,3))

and you must say

dothis ($obj.dothat): 1,2,3

or

$obj.dothat.dothis: 1,2,3

if you mean the other thing.

Also note that if any term in a list is a bare closure or pointy sub, it will be considered to be the final argument of its list unless the closure's right curly is followed immediately by comma or comma surrogate. In particular, a method call does *not* extend the list, so you can say:

@list.grep: { $_ % 2 }.map: { $_ - 1 }.say

and that will be taken as equivalent to

@list.grep({ $_ % 2 }).map({ $_ - 1 }).say

Methods (and subs) may be declared as lvalues with is rw. You can use an argumentless rw method anywhere you can use a variable, including in temp and let statements. (In fact, you can use an rw method with arguments as a variable as long as the arguments are used only to identify the actual value to change, and don't otherwise have strange side effects that differ between rvalue and lvalue usage. Setter methods that expect the new value as an argument do not fall into the well-behaved category, however.)

Method calls on scalars go to the referenced object (autoboxing value types as necessary):

$result = $object.doit();
$length = "mystring".codes;

But method calls on containers go to the container:

$elems = @array.elems;
@keys  = %hash.keys;
$sig   = &sub.signature;

Use the variable pseudo-function to get at the container of a scalar variable.

if variable($scalar).constant {...}

You can also get at the container through the appropriate symbol table:

if MY::<$scalar>.constant {...}

Class methods are just methods that can take a class as their invocant.

Submethods

Submethods are for declaring infrastructural methods that shouldn't be inherited by subclasses, such as initializers:

    submethod BUILD ($arg) {
	$.attr = $arg;
    }

Apart from the keyword, submethod declaration and call syntax is identical to method syntax. You may mix methods and submethods of the same name within the class hierarchy, but only the methods are visible to derived classes via inheritance. A submethod is called only when a method call is dispatched directly to the current class.

Attributes

Attributes are stored in an opaque datatype, not in a hash. Not even the class has to care how they're stored, since they're declared much like ordinary variables. Instead of my, use has:

class Dog is Mammal {
    has $.name = "fido";
    has $.tail is rw;
    has @.legs;
    has $!brain;
    ...
}

Public attributes have a secondary sigil of "dot", indicating the automatic generation of an accessor method of the same name. Private attributes use an exclamation to indicate that no public accessor is generated. The exclamation is optional, so these are identical in effect:

has $!brain;
has $brain;

And any later references to the private variable may either use or omit the exclamation, as you wish to emphasize or ignore the privacy of the variable.

For public attributes, some traits are copied to the accessor method. The rw trait causes the generated accessor to be declared rw, making it an lvalue method. The default is a read-only accessor.

If you declare the class as rw, then all the class's attributes default to rw, much like a C struct.

You may write your own accessors to override any or all of the autogenerated ones.

The attribute variables may be used within instance methods to refer directly to the attribute values. Outside the instance methods, the only access to attributes is through the accessors since an object has to be specified. The dot form of attribute variables may be used in derived classes because the dot form always implies a virtual accessor call. Every "dot" declaration also declares a corresponding private "exclamation" storage location, and the exclamation form may be used only in the actual class, not in derived classes. Reference to the internal storage location via $!foo should generally be restricted to submethods. Ordinary methods should stick to the $.foo form.

Pseudo-assignment to an attribute declaration specifies the default value. The value on the right is evaluated at class composition time, that is, while the class is being compiled and the class object constructed. However, if the default value is a closure, that closure will be executed later at object initialization time. (Use a double closure to initialize to a closure value.) The topic of the closure will be the attribute being initialized, while "self" refers to the entire object being initialized.

Class attributes are declared with either my or our. The only difference from ordinary my or our variables is that an accessor is generated according to the secondary sigil:

our $.count;        # generates a public read-only .count accessor
our %!cache is rw;  # generates no public accessor
my  $.count;        # generates a public read-only .count accessor
my  %!cache is rw;  # generates no public accessor

Construction and Initialization

All classes inherit a default new constructor from Object. It expects all arguments to be named parameters initializing attributes of the same name. You may write your own new to override the default, or write constructors with any other name you like. As in Perl 5, a constructor is any routine that calls bless. Unlike in Perl 5, you call it as a method on the class object (though any object may be used as a class object), passing the candidate as the first argument. To bless a hash as in Perl 5, say:

$object = $class.bless({k1 => $v1, k2 => $v2, ...});

If the candidate is omitted, a candidate object is implicitly created in the current class by calling CREATE:

$object = $class.bless(k1 => $v1, k2 => $v2, ...)
$object = $class.bless(:k1($v1), :k2($v2), ...)  # same

(The default CREATE makes an opaque object.)

All arguments to this form of bless must be named arguments, not positional. Hence, the main purpose of custom constructors is to turn positional arguments into named arguments for bless. The bless method allows an object to be used for its class invocant. (Your constructor need not allow this). In any case, the object is not used as a prototype. Use .clone instead of .bless if that's what you mean.

Any named arguments to bless are automatically passed to the CREATE and BUILD routines. If you wish to pass special options to the CREATE routine (such as an alternate representation), call CREATE yourself and then pass the resulting candidate to .bless:

my $candidate = $class.CREATE(:repr<P6opaque>);
$object = $class.bless($candidate, :k1($v1), :k2($v2))

For the built-in default CREATE method, P6opaque is the default representation. Other possiblilities are P6hash, P5hash, P5array, PyDict, Cstruct, etc.

The bless function automatically calls all appropriate BUILD routines by calling the BUILDALL routine for the current class, which initializes the object in least-derived to most-derived order. DESTROY and DESTROYALL work the same way, only in reverse.

The default BUILD and BUILDALL are inherited from Object, so you need to write initialization routines only if you wish to modify the default behavior. If the name of a named argument begins with a :: and corresponds to a class or role being built, the list value of that argument is passed as a list of named arguments to that class or role's BUILD. (If the value of that argument is a closure instead of a list, that closure will be called to return a list. The argument to that closure will be the name of the class currently being initialized.) In the absence of a class-labeled pair, all the arguments to bless are passed to the BUILD.

You can clone an object, changing some of the attributes:

$newdog = $olddog.clone(:trick<RollOver>);

You can write your own BUILD submethod to control initialization. If you name an attribute as a parameter, that attribute is initialized directly, so

submethod BUILD ($.tail, $!legs) {}

is equivalent to

    submethod BUILD ($tail, $legs) {
	$.tail = $tail;
	$!legs = $legs;
    }

Whether you write your own BUILD or not, at the end of the BUILD, any default attribute values are implicitly copied into any attributes that haven't otherwise been initialized.

Mutating methods

You can call an in-place mutator method like this:

@array.=sort;

If there is a self:sort operator defined, that will be used. Otherwise one will be autogenerated from the ordinary sort operator, on the order of:

@array = @array.sort;

One handy place for an in-place mutator is to call a constructor on a variable of a known type:

my Dog $spot .= new(:tail<LONG> :legs<SHORT>);

Calling sets of methods

For any method name, there may be some number of candidate methods that could handle the request: typically, inherited methods or multimethod variants. The ordinary "dot" operator dispatches to a method in the standard fashion. There are also "dot" variants that call some number of methods with the same name:

$object.meth(@args)   # calls one method or dies
$object.?meth(@args)  # calls method if there is one, otherwise undef
$object.*meth(@args)  # calls all methods (0 or more)
$object.+meth(@args)  # calls all methods (1 or more)

Any method can defer to the next candidate method in the list by saying next METHOD. Any method can stop the progression by saying last METHOD. The order and selection of the candidates may be specified by arguments to a pseudo-class known as WALK:

$object.*WALK[:breadth:omit($?CLASS)]::meth(@args);

The WALK pseudo-class takes these arguments:

:canonical      # canonical dispatch order
:ascendant      # most-derived first, like destruction order
:descendant     # least-derived first, like construction order
:preorder       # like Perl 5 dispatch
:breadth        # like multimethod dispatch

:super              # only immediate parent classes
:method<name>       # only classes containing method declaration
:omit(Selector)     # only classes that don't match selector
:include(Selector)  # only classes that match selector

Parallel dispatch

Any of the method call forms may be turned into a hyperoperator by treating the method call as a postfix:

@object».meth(@args)   # calls one method on each
@object».?meth(@args)  # calls method if there is one on each
@object».*meth(@args)  # calls all methods (0 or more) on each
@object».+meth(@args)  # calls all methods (1 or more) on each
@object».=meth(@args)  # calls mutator method on each
@object».:meth(@args)  # calls private method on each

Hyperoperators treat a junction as a scalar value, so saying:

$junction».meth(@args);

is just like:

$junction.meth(@args);

To hyperoperate over the values of a junction you have to explicitly pull out the values:

$junction.values».meth(@args);

Multiple dispatch

The "long name" of a subroutine or method includes the type signature of its invocant arguments. The "short name" doesn't. If you put multi in front of any sub (or method) declaration, it allows multiple long names to share a short name, provided all of them are declared multi. A sub (or method) without a multi doesn't share with anything outside of it or declared prior to it. Only one such sub (or method) can inhabit a given namespace, and it hides any outer subs (or less-derived methods) of the same short name. It may share with multis declared after it in the same scope if declared with the keyword proto, but in that case it functions only as the final tie-breaker if the inner multies can't decide among themselves what to do. (It may then, of course, decide to redispatch outside of the current scope.) The signature of such a proto-multi also nails down the presumed order and naming of positional parameters, so that any multi call with named arguments in that scope can presume to rearrange those arguments into positional parameters based on that information. (Unrecognized names remain named arguments.)

For subs or methods declared multi, only one instance of the long name can be in any namespace, and it hides any outer (or less-derived) routines with the same long name. It does not hide any routines with the same short name but a different long name. In other words, multis with the same short name can come from several different namespaces provided their long names differ and their short names aren't hidden by a non-multi declaration in some intermediate scope.

When you call a subroutine with a particular short name, if there are multiple visible long names, they are all considered candidates. They are sorted into an order according to how close the actual types of the arguments match up with the declared types of the parameters of each candidate. The best candidate is called, unless there's a tie, in which case only candidates marked with the default trait are considered, and the best matching default routine is used. If there are no default routines, or if the available defaults are also tied, a final tie-breaking proto sub is called, if there is one (see above). Otherwise an exception is thrown.

Ordinarily all the arguments of a multi sub are considered invocants. Here's a declaration for an integer range operator with two invocants:

multi sub infix:<..>(Int $min, Int $max) {...}

Sometimes you want to have optional arguments that aren't counted as part of the long name. For instance, if you want to allow an optional "step" parameter to your range operator, but not count it as an invocant, put a colon instead of a comma at the end of the invocant list:

multi sub infix:<..>(Int $min, Int $max: Int $by = 1) {...}

A multi method can be declared within a class, in which case it is visible to both the single-dispatcher and the multiple-dispatcher. Such a method's invocants must always be explicitly declared.

The caller indicates whether to use single dispatch or multiple dispatch by the call syntax. The "dot" form and the indirect object form default to single dispatch. Subroutine calls with multiple arguments and operators with multiple operands default to multiple dispatch. For functions or methods with only a single invocant, the dispatchers are defined to have the same semantics, which is why it doesn't matter which of these you say:

$handle.close
close($handle)

However, with additional arguments, there are differences. The single dispatch form:

$handle.seek($pos)

preferentially considers only ordinary methods and multimethods from the class hierarchy of $handle, and fails over to the multiple dispatcher as a last resort only if no method can be found in the class hierarchy.

On the other hand, the multi dispatch form:

seek($handle, $pos);

considers all visible multi subs and multi methods of that name equally. For this purpose ordinary methods are considered multi-methods of a single invocant, which, since they are less specific than the declarations with more invocants, are put at the end of the list. (So there's no need for an explicit failover from multiple to single dispatch.)

Multi submethods work just like multi methods except they are constrained to an exact type match on the first invocant.

Perl 6.0.0 is not required to support multiple dispatch on named parameters, only on positional parameters. Note that most builtins will map known named parameters to positional via a proto declaration.

Within the multiple dispatcher, next METHOD means to try the next best match, or next best default in case of tie, or the proto sub if there is one.

Attributes are tied to a particular class definition, so a multi method can only directly access the attributes of a class it's defined within when the first invocant is the "self" of that attribute. However, it may call the private attribute accessors from a different class if that other class has indicated that it trusts the class the multi method is defined in:

    class MyClass {
	trusts Yourclass;
	...
    }

The syntax for calling back to MyClass is $obj!MyClass::meth().

The sub keyword is optional after either multi or proto.

Roles

Classes are primarily in charge of object management, and only secondarily in charge of software reuse. In Perl 6, roles take over the job of managing software reuse. Depending on how you care to look at it, a role is like a partial class, or an interface with default implementation, or a set of generic methods and their associated data, or a class closed at compile time.

Roles may be composed into a class at compile time, in which case you get automatic detection of conflicting methods. A role may also be mixed into a class or object at run time to produce an anonymous derived class with extra capabilities, but in this case conflicting methods are overridden by the new role silently. In either case, a class is necessary for instantiation--a role may not be directly instantiated.

A role is declared like a class, but with a role keyword:

    role Pet {
	method feed ($food) {
	    $food.open_can;
	    $food.put_in_bowl;
	    self.call;
	}
    }

A role may not inherit from a class, but may be composed of other roles. However, this "crony" composition is not evaluated until class composition time. This means that if two roles bring in the same crony, there's no conflict--it's just as if the class pulled in the crony role itself and the respective roles didn't. A role may never conflict with itself regardless of its method of incorporation. A role that brings in two conflicting crony roles *may* resolve them as if it were a class. This solution is accepted by the class unless the class supplies its own solution. If two different roles resolve the same crony conflict two different ways, those roles are themselves in conflict and must be resolved by a "more derived" role or the class.

A role doesn't know its own type until it is composed into a class. Any mention of its main type (such as ::?CLASS) is generic, as is any reference to self or the type of the invocant. You can use a role name as a type, but only for constraints, not for declaring actual objects. (However, if you use a role as if it were a class, an anonymous class is generated that composes the role, which provides a way to force a role to test its crony composition for infelicities.)

A role's main type is generic by default, but you can also parameterize other types explicitly using type parameters:

    role Pet[::Petfood = TableScraps] {
	method feed (Petfood $food) {...}
    }

(Note that in this case you must not use ::Petfood in the inner declaration, or it would rebind the type to type of the actual food parameter.)

If a role merely declares methods without defining them, it degenerates to an interface:

    role Pet {
	method feed ($food) {...}
	method groom () {...}
	method scratch (:$where) {...}
    }

Note that, while these methods must become available at class composition time, they might be supplied by any of: another role, the class itself, or some superclass. We know the methods that are coming from the other roles or the class, but we don't necessarily know the complete set of methods supplied by our super classes if they are open or rely on wildcard delegation. However, the class composer is allowed to assume that only currently declared superclass methods or non-wildcard methods are going to be available. A stub can always be installed somewhere to "supply" a missing method's declaration.

Roles may have attributes:

    role Pet {
	has $.collar = { Collar.new(Tag.new) };
	method id () { return $.collar.tag }
	method lose_collar () { undef $.collar }
    }

If you want to parameterize the initial value of a role attribute, be sure to put a colon if you don't want the parameter to be considered part of the long name:

    role Pet[::ID: $tag] {
	has ID $.collar .= new($tag);
    }

Unlike in a class, within a role the has declarator distinguishes private attribute declared with exclamation from those without. To declare a private attribute that is shared by the class, use the exclamationless notation in the declaration:

has Nose $sniffer .= new();

A completely private role attribute may be declared like this:

has $!spleen;

The name of such a private attribute is always considered lexically scoped. If a role declares private lexical items, those items are private to the role due to the nature of lexical scoping. Accessors to such items may be exported to the class, but this is not the default. In particular, a role may say

trusts ::?Class;

to allow self!attr() access to the role's $!attr variables with the class or from other roles composed into the class. Conflicts between private accessor are also caught at composition time, but of course need not consider super classes, since no-one outside the current class (or a trusted class) can call a private accessor at all. (Private accessors are never virtual, and must be package qualified if called from a trusted scope other than our own. That is, it's either self!attr() or $obj!TrustsMe::attr().)

Outside of the has declaration, the exclamation mark is again optional, as with an ordinary private attribute in the class.

A role may also distinguish a shared method

method foo ...

from a nonshared private method:

my method !foo ...

Generally you'd just use a lexically scoped sub, though.

my sub foo ...

[Conjectural: To put a private sub into the class, say

our sub !foo ...

]

A role can abstract the decision to delegate:

    role Pet {
	has $groomer handles <bathe groom trim> = hire_groomer();
    }

Note that this puts the three methods into the class as well as $groomer. In contrast, "has $!groomer" would only put the three methods.

A role is allowed to declare an additional inheritance for its class when that is considered an implementation detail:

    role Pet {
	is Friend;
    }

A class incorporates a role with the verb "does", like this:

class Dog is Mammal does Pet does Sentry {...}

or equivalently, within the body of the class closure:

    class Dog {
	is Mammal;
	does Pet;
	does Sentry;
	...
    }

There is no ordering dependency among the roles.

A class's explicit method definition hides any role definition of the same name. A role method in turn hides any methods inherited from other classes.

If there are no method name conflicts between roles (or with the class), then each role's methods can be installed in the class. If, however, two roles try to introduce a method of the same name the composition of the class fails.

There are several ways to solve method conflicts. The first is simply to write a class method that overrides the conflicting role methods, perhaps figuring out which role method to call.

Alternately, if the role's methods are declared multi, they can be disambiguated based on their long name. If the roles forget to declare them as multi, you can force a multi on the roles' methods by installing a multi stub in the class being constructed:

multi method shake {...}

A proto method also works, and will be called if the multi fails:

proto method shake { warn "They couldn't decide" }

Conjectural: If the original invocant is in a variable that is constrained to be of one role or another, then that type could be used to dispatch to the correct role's method in cases where they can't be distinguished by differences in the actual argument types:

    class DogTree {
	does DogBark;
	does TreeBark;
	multi method bark {...}
	...
    }

    my DogBark $dog = new DogTree;
    my TreeBark $tree = new DogTree;

    $dog.bark();	# picks Dog role's bark method
    $tree.bark();	# picks Tree role's bark method

Run-time mixins are done with does and but. The does binary operator is a mutator that derives a new anonymous class (if necessary) and binds the object to it:

$fido does Sentry

The does operator returns the object so you can nest mixins:

$fido does Sentry does Tricks does TailChasing does Scratch;

Unlike the compile-time role composition, each of these layers on a new mixin with a new level of inheritance, creating a new anonymous class for dear old Fido, so that a .chase method from TailChasing hides a .chase method from Sentry.

You can also mixin a precomposed set of roles:

$fido does Sentry | Tricks | TailChasing | Scratch;

This will level the playing field for collisions among the new set of roles, and guarantees the creation of no more than one more anonymous class.

A role still can't conflict with itself, but it can hide its previous methods in the parent class, and the calculation of what conflicts is done again for the set of roles being mixed in.

A role applied with does may be parameterized with an initializer in parentheses, but only if the role supplies exactly one attribute to the mixin class:

$fido does Wag($tail);
$line does taint($istainted);

The but operator creates a copy and works on that. It also knows how to generalize a particular enumerated value to its role. So

0 but True

is short for something like:

0 but bool::True

A property is defined by a role like this:

    role SomeRole {
	has SomeType $.prop is rw = 1;
    }

You can declare a property with

my int property answer;

and that declares a role whose name is the same as the accessor:

    my role answer {
	has int $.answer is rw;
    }

Then you can say

$a = 0 but answer(42)

Note that the parenthesized form is not a subroutine or method call. It's just special initializing syntax for roles that contain a single property. The above really means something like:

$a = ($anonymous = 0) does answer(42);

which really means:

(($anonymous = 0) does answer).answer = 42;
$a = $anonymous;

Which is why there's a but operator.

Traits

Traits are just properties (roles) applied to declared items like containers or classes. It's the declaration of the item itself that makes traits seem more permanent than ordinary properties. In addition to adding the property, a trait can also have side effects.

Traits are generally applied with the "is" keyword, though not always. To define a trait handler for an "is xxx" trait, define one or more multisubs into a property role like this:

    role xxx {
	has Int $.xxx;
	multi trait_auxiliary:is(xxx $trait, Class $container: $arg?) {...}
	multi trait_auxiliary:is(xxx $trait, Any $container: $arg?) {...}
    }

Then it can function as a trait. A well-behaved trait handler will say

$container does xxx($arg);

somewhere inside to set the metadata on the container correctly. Since a class can function as a role when it comes to parameter type matching, you can also say:

    class MyBase {
	multi trait_auxiliary:is(MyBase $base, Class $class: $arg?) {...}
	multi trait_auxiliary:is(MyBase $tied, Any $container: $arg?) {...}
    }

These capture control if MyBase wants to capture control of how it gets used by any class or container. But usually you can just let it call the generic defaults:

multi *trait_auxiliary:is(Class $base, Class $class: $arg?) {...}

which adds $base to the "isa" list of $class, or

multi *trait_auxiliary:is(Class $tied, Any $container: $arg?) {...}

which sets the "tie" type of the container to the implementation type in $tied.

Most traits are introduced by use of a "helping verb", which could be something like "is", or "will", or "can", or "might", or "should", or "does". We call these helping verbs "trait auxiliaries". Here's "will", which (being syntactic sugar) merely delegates to back to "is":

    multi sub *trait_auxiliary:will($trait, $container: &arg) {
	trait_auxiliary:is($trait, $container, &arg);
    }

Other traits are applied with a single word, and we call one of those a "trait verb". For instance, the "returns" trait is defined something like this:

    role returns {
	has ReturnType $.returns;
	multi sub trait_verb:returns($container: ReturnType $arg) {
	    $container does returns($arg);
	}
	...
    }

Unlike compile-time roles, which all flatten out in the same class, compile-time traits are applied one at a time, like mixin roles. You can, in fact, apply a trait to a container at run time, but if you do, it's just an ordinary mixin role. You have to call the appropriate trait_auxiliary:is() routine yourself if you want it to do any extra shenanigans. The compiler won't call it for you at run time like it would at compile time.

Delegation

Delegation lets you pretend that some other object's methods are your own. Delegation is specified by a handles trait verb with an argument specifying one or more method names that the current object and the delegated object will have in common:

has $tail handles 'wag';

Since the method name (but nothing else) is known at class construction time, the following .wag method is autogenerated for you:

method wag (*@args is context(Lazy)) { $!tail.wag(*@args) }

You can specify multiple method names:

has $.legs handles <walk run lope shake pee>;

It's illegal to call the outer method unless the attribute has been initialized to an object of a type supporting the method, such as by:

has Tail $.tail handles 'wag' = { .new(*%_) };

Note that putting a Tail type on the attribute does not necessarily mean that the method is always delegated to the Tail class. The dispatch is still based on the run-time type of the object, not the declared type.

Any other kind of argument to handles is considered to be a smartmatch selector for methods. So you can say:

has $.fur is rw handles /^get_/;

If you say

has $.fur is rw handles Groomable;

then you get only those methods available via the Groomable role or class.

Wildcard matches are evaluated only after it has been determined that there's no exact match to the method name anywhere. When you have multiple wildcard delegations to different objects, it's possible to have a conflict of method names. Wildcard method matches are evaluated in order, so the earliest one wins. (Non-wildcard method conflicts can be caught at class composition time.)

If, where you would ordinarily specify a string, you put a pair, then the pair maps the method name in this class to the method name in the other class. If you put a hash, each key/value pair is treated as such a mapping. Such mappings are not considered wildcards.

has $.fur handles { :shakefur<shake> :scratch<get_fleas> };

You can do a wildcard renaming, but not with pairs. Instead do smartmatch with a substitution:

has $.fur handles (s/^furget_/get_/);

Ordinarily delegation is based on an attribute holding an object reference, but it can also be based on the return value of a method:

method select_tail handles <wag hang> {...}

If your delegation object happens to be an array:

has @handlers handles 'foo';

then Perl 6 assumes that your array contains a list of potential handlers, and you just want to call the first one that succeeds. This is not considered a wildcard match unless the "handles" argument forces it to be.

If your delegation object happens to be a hash:

has %objects handles 'foo';

then the hash provides a mapping from the string value of "self" to the object that should be delegated to:

    has %barkers handles "bark" =
		(Chihauhau => $yip,
		    Beagle => $yap,
		   Terrier => $arf,
		 StBernard => $woof,
		);
    method prefix:<~>( return "$.breed" )

If the string is not found in the hash, a "next METHOD" is automatically performed.

Types and Subtypes

The type system of Perl consists of roles, classes, and subtypes. You can declare a subtype like this:

my subset Str_not2b of Str where /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/;

or this:

my Str subset Str_not2b where /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/;

An anonymous subtype looks like this:

Str where /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/;

A where clause implies future smartmatching of some kind: the as-yet unspecified object of the type on the left must match the selector on the right. Our example is roughly equivalent to this closure:

{ $_.does(Str) and $_ ~~ /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/; }

except that a subtype knows when to call itself.

A subtype is not a subclass. Subclasses add capabilities, whereas a subtype adds constraints (takes away capabiliites). A subtype is primarily a handy way of sneaking smartmatching into multiple dispatch. Just as a role allows you to specify something more general than a class, a subtype allows you to specify something more specific than a class. A subtype specifies a subset of the values that the original type specified, which is why we use the subset keyword for it.

While subtypes are primarily intended for restricting parameter types for multiple dispatch, they also let you impose preconditions on assignment. If you declare any container with a subtype, Perl will check the constraint against any value you might try to bind or assign to the container.

    subset Str_not2b of Str where /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/;
    subset EvenNum   of Num where { $^n % 2 == 0 }
									    
    my Str_not2b $hamlet;
    $hamlet = 'isnt';   # Okay because 'isnt' ~~ /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/
    $hamlet = 'amnt';   # Bzzzzzzzt!   'amnt' !~ /^[isnt|arent|amnot|aint]$/
									    
    my EvenNum $n;
    $n = 2;             # Okay
    $n = -2;            # Okay
    $n = 0;             # Okay
    $n = 3;             # Bzzzzzzzt

It's legal to base one subtype on another; it just adds an additional constraint. That is, it's a subset of a subset.

You can use an anonymous subtype in a signature:

sub check_even (Num where { $^n % 2 == 0 } $even) {...}

That's a bit unwieldy, but by the normal type declaration rules you can turn it around to get the variable out front:

sub check_even ($even of Num where { $^n % 2 == 0 }) {...}

and just for convenience we also let you write it:

sub check_even (Num $even where { $^n % 2 == 0 }) {...}

since all the type constraints in a signature parameter are just anded together anyway.

Subtype constraints are used as tiebreakers in multiple dispatch:

    use Rules::Common :profanity;

    multi sub mesg ($mesg of Str where /<profanity>/ is copy) {
	$mesg ~~ s:g/<profanity>/[expletive deleted]/;
	print $MESG_LOG: $mesg;
    }
									    
    multi sub mesg ($mesg of Str) {
	print $MESG_LOG: $mesg;
    }

A multimethod with a matching constraint is preferred over an equivalent one with no constraint. So the first mesg above is preferred if the constraint matches, and otherwise the second is preferred.

Enums

An enum is a low-level class that can function as a role or property. A given enum value can function as a subtype, a method, or as an ordinary value (an argumentless sub). The values are specified as a list:

my enum day ['Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat'];
my enum day <Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>;

The default return type is int or str depending on the type of the first value. The type can be specified:

my bit enum maybe <no yes>;
my int enum day ['Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat'];
my enum day of int <Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>;
my enum day returns int <Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>;

An anonymous enum just makes sure each string turns into a pair with sequentially increasing values, so:

%enum = enum < ook! ook. ook? >;

is equivalent to:

%enum = ();
%enum<ook!> = 0;
%enum<ook.> = 1;
%enum<ook?> = 2;

The enum installer inspects list values for pairs, where the value of the pair sets the next value explicitly. Non-pairs ++ the previous value. Since the «...» quoter automatically recognizes pair syntax along with interpolations, we can simply say:

    my enum DayOfWeek «:Sun(1) Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat»;

    our str enum Phonetic «:Alpha<A> Bravo Charlie Delta
			    Echo Foxtrot Golf Hotel India Juliet
			    Kilo Lima Mike November Oscar Papa
			    Quebec Romeo Sierra Tango Uniform
			    Victor Whiskey X-ray Yankee Zulu»;

    enum roman [i => 1,   v => 5,
		x => 10,  l => 50,
		c => 100, d => 500,
		m => 1000];

    my Item enum hex «:zero(0) one two three four five six seven eight nine
		      :ten<a> eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen»;

You may import enum types; only non-colliding values are imported. Colliding enum values are hidden and must be disambiguated with the type name. Any attempt to use the ambiguous name will result in a fatal compilation error. (All colliding values are hidden, not just the new one, or the old one.) Any explicit sub or type definition hides all imported enum values of the same name but will produce a warning unless is redefined is included. Note that true() is a built-in function, while True is short for bool::True.

Enum values may be used as a property on the right side of a but, and the enum type will be intuited from the value to make sure the object in question has the right semantics mixed in:

$x = "Today" but Tue;

is the same as

$x = "Today" but day::Tue;

or pseudo-hash form:

$x = "Today" but day<Tue>;

which is short for something like:

$x = "Today";
$x does day;
$x.day = &day::('Tue');

There's also a pseudo-functional form:

$x = "Today" but day(Tue);

which lets you cheat:

$x = "Today" but day(3);

After any of those

$x.day

returns day::Tue (that is, 3), and

$x ~~ day
$x ~~ Tue
$x.does(Tue)
$x.does(day)
$x.day == Tue
day($x) == Tue
Tue($x)
$x.Tue

all return true, and

$x.does(Wed)
$x.Wed
$x.day == Wed
8.does(day)
8 ~~ day

all return false.

Two built-in enums are:

our bit enum *bool <False True>;
our bit enum *taint <Untainted Tainted>;

Note that bool and taint are really role names. You can call .bool on any built-in type, but the value returned is of type bit. Never compare a value to "true", or even "True". Just use it in a boolean context.

Open vs Closed Classes

By default, all classes in Perl are non-final, which means you can derive from them. They are also open, which means you can add more methods to them, though you have to be explicit that that is what you're doing:

    class Object is also {
	method wow () { say "Wow, I'm an object." }
    }

Otherwise you'll get a class redefinition error. (Also, to completely replace a definition, use "is instead" instead of "is also"...but don't do that.)

For optimization purposes, Perl 6 gives the top-level application the right to close and finalize classes.

use optimize :classes<close finalize>;

This merely changes the application's default to closed and final, which means that at the end of the main compilation (CHECK time) the optimizer is allowed to look for candidate classes to close or finalize. But anyone (including the main application) can request that any class stay open or basal, and the class closer/finalizer must honor that.

use class :open<Mammal Insect> :basal<Str>

These properties may also be specified on the class definition:

class Mammal is open {...}
class Insect is open {...}
class Str is basal {...}

or by lexically scoped pragma around the class definition:

    {
	use class :open;
	class Mammal {...}
	class Insect {...}
    }
    {
	use class :basal;
	class Str {...}
    }

There is no syntax for declaring individual classes closed or final. The application may only request that the optimizer close and finalize unmarked classes.

Interface Consistency

By default, all methods and submethods that do not declare an explicit *% parameter will get an implicit *%_ parameter declared for them whether they like it or not. In other words, all methods allow unexpected named arguments, so that next METHOD semantics work consistently.

If you mark a class "is hidden", it hides the current class from "next METHOD" semantics, and incidentally suppresses the autogeneration of *%_ parameters. Hidden classes may be visited as SUPER::, but not via "next".

A similar effect can be achieved from the derived class by saying hides Base instead of is Base.

Introspection

Every class object has a .meta method that lets you get at the class's metaclass object, which lets you get at all the metadata properties for the class:

MyClass.getmethods()	# call MyClass's .getmethods method (error?)
MyClass.meta.getmethods()	# get the method list of MyClass

Each object of the class also has a .meta method:

$obj.meta.getmethods();

Class traits may include:

    identifier    Dog-1.2.1-http://www.some.com/~jrandom
	name      Dog
	version   1.2.1
	authority http://www.some.com/~jrandom
    author        Joe Random
    description   This class implements camera obscura.
    subject       optics, boxes
    language      ja_JP
    licensed      Artistic|GPL
    isa           list of parent classes
    roles         list of roles
    disambig      how to deal with ambiguous method names from roles
    layout        P6opaque, P6hash, P5hash, P5array, PyDict, Cstruct, etc.

The .meta.getmethods method returns method-descriptors containing:

name		the name of the method
signature		the parameters of the method
returns		the return type of the method
multi		whether duplicate names are allowed
do			the method body

The .getmethods method has a selector parameter that lets you specify whether you want to see a flattened or hierarchical view, whether you're interested in private methods, and so forth.

The .getattributes method returns a list of attribute descriptors that have traits like these:

name
type
scope
rw
private
accessor
build
constant

Strictly speaking, metamethods like .isa(), .does(), and .can() should be called through the meta object:

$obj.meta.can("bark")
$obj.meta.does(Dog)
$obj.meta.isa(Mammal)

But Object gives you shortcuts to those, if you don't override them.

The smartmatch:

$obj ~~ Dog

actually calls:

$obj.meta.does(Dog)

which is true if $obj either "does" or "isa" Dog (or "isa" something that "does" Dog).

Unlike in Perl 5 where .can returns a single routine reference, Perl 6's version of .meta.can returns a "WALK" iterator for a set of routines that match the name, including all autoloaded and wildcarded possibilities. In particular, .can interrogates any class's AUTOMETH for names that are to be considered methods in the class, even if they haven't been declared yet. Role composition sometimes relies on this ability to determine whether a superclass supplies a method of a particular name if it's required and hasn't been supplied by the class or one of its roles.