NAME
Type::Registry - a glorified hashref for looking up type constraints
SYNOPSIS
package Foo::Bar;
use Type::Registry;
my $reg = "Type::Registry"->for_me; # a registry for Foo::Bar
# Register all types from Types::Standard
$reg->add_types(-Standard);
# Register just one type from Types::XSD
$reg->add_types(-XSD => ["NonNegativeInteger"]);
# Register all types from MyApp::Types
$reg->add_types("MyApp::Types");
# Create a type alias
$reg->alias_type("NonNegativeInteger" => "Count");
# Look up a type constraint
my $type = $reg->lookup("ArrayRef[Count]");
$type->check([1, 2, 3.14159]); # croaks
Alternatively:
package Foo::Bar;
use Type::Registry qw( t );
# Register all types from Types::Standard
t->add_types(-Standard);
# Register just one type from Types::XSD
t->add_types(-XSD => ["NonNegativeInteger"]);
# Register all types from MyApp::Types
t->add_types("MyApp::Types");
# Create a type alias
t->alias_type("NonNegativeInteger" => "Count");
# Look up a type constraint
my $type = t("ArrayRef[Count]");
$type->check([1, 2, 3.14159]); # croaks
STATUS
Type::Registry (and Type::Parser) is currently a pretty isolated part of this distribution. It seems like something that would be useful, but it's not heavily integrated with everything else. In particular, if you do:
use Type::Registry qw(t);
use Types::Standard -types;
Then the Str
, Num
, etc keywords imported from Types::Standard will work fine, but t->lookup("Str")
and t->lookup("Num")
will fail, because importing types from a library does not automatically add them to your registry.
Clearly some kind of integration is desirable between Type::Registry and Type::Library, but exactly what form that will take is still to be decided.
So if you decide to use Type::Registry, be aware of its somewhat experimental status. It's not likely to disappear completely, but there may be changes ahead.
DESCRIPTION
A type registry is basically just a hashref mapping type names to type constraint objects.
Constructors
new
-
Create a new glorified hashref.
for_class($class)
-
Create or return the existing glorified hashref associated with the given class.
for_me
-
Create or return the existing glorified hashref associated with the caller.
Methods
add_types(@libraries)
-
The libraries list is treated as an "optlist" (a la Data::OptList).
Strings are the names of type libraries; if the first character is a hyphen, it is expanded to the "Types::" prefix. If followed by an arrayref, this is the list of types to import from that library. Otherwise, imports all types from the library.
use Type::Registry qw(t); t->add_types(-Standard); # OR: t->add_types("Types::Standard"); t->add_types( -TypeTiny => ['HashLike'], -Standard => ['HashRef' => { -as => 'RealHash' }], );
alias_type($oldname, $newname)
-
Create an alias for an existing type.
simple_lookup($name)
-
Look up a type in the registry by name.
Returns undef if not found.
lookup($name)
-
Look up by name, with a DSL.
t->lookup("Int|ArrayRef[Int]")
The DSL can be summed up as:
X type from this registry My::Lib::X type from a type library ~X complementary type X | Y union X & Y intersection X[...] parameterized type slurpy X slurpy type Foo::Bar:: class type
Croaks if not found.
AUTOLOAD
-
Overloaded to call
lookup
.$registry->Str; # like $registry->lookup("Str")
Functions
t
-
This class can export a function
t
which acts like"Type::Registry"->for_class($importing_class)
.
BUGS
Please report any bugs to http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Type-Tiny.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.