bionic (3) Types::Standard.3pm.gz

Provided by: libtype-tiny-perl_1.002001-1_all bug

NAME

       Types::Standard - bundled set of built-in types for Type::Tiny

STATUS

       This module is covered by the Type-Tiny stability policy.

DESCRIPTION

       Type::Tiny bundles a few types which seem to be useful.

   Moose-like
       The following types are similar to those described in Moose::Util::TypeConstraints.

       "Any"
           Absolutely any value passes this type constraint (even undef).

       "Item"
           Essentially the same as "Any". All other type constraints in this library inherit directly or
           indirectly from "Item".

       "Bool"
           Values that are reasonable booleans. Accepts 1, 0, the empty string and undef.

       "Maybe[`a]"
           Given another type constraint, also accepts undef. For example, "Maybe[Int]" accepts all integers
           plus undef.

       "Undef"
           Only undef passes this type constraint.

       "Defined"
           Only undef fails this type constraint.

       "Value"
           Any defined, non-reference value.

       "Str"
           Any string.

           (The only difference between "Value" and "Str" is that the former accepts typeglobs and vstrings.)

           Other customers also bought: "StringLike" from Types::TypeTiny.

       "Num"
           See "LaxNum" and "StrictNum" below.

       "Int"
           An integer; that is a string of digits 0 to 9, optionally prefixed with a hyphen-minus character.

       "ClassName"
           The name of a loaded package. The package must have @ISA or $VERSION defined, or must define at least
           one sub to be considered a loaded package.

       "RoleName"
           Like "ClassName", but the package must not define a method called "new". This is subtly different
           from Moose's type constraint of the same name; let me know if this causes you any problems. (I can't
           promise I'll change anything though.)

       "Ref[`a]"
           Any defined reference value, including blessed objects.

           Unlike Moose, "Ref" is a parameterized type, allowing Scalar::Util::reftype checks, a la

              Ref["HASH"]  # hashrefs, including blessed hashrefs

       "ScalarRef[`a]"
           A value where "ref($value) eq "SCALAR" or ref($value) eq "REF"".

           If parameterized, the referred value must pass the additional constraint.  For example,
           "ScalarRef[Int]" must be a reference to a scalar which holds an integer value.

       "ArrayRef[`a]"
           A value where "ref($value) eq "ARRAY"".

           If parameterized, the elements of the array must pass the additional constraint. For example,
           "ArrayRef[Num]" must be a reference to an array of numbers.

           Other customers also bought: "ArrayLike" from Types::TypeTiny.

       "HashRef[`a]"
           A value where "ref($value) eq "HASH"".

           If parameterized, the values of the hash must pass the additional constraint. For example,
           "HashRef[Num]" must be a reference to an hash where the values are numbers. The hash keys are not
           constrained, but Perl limits them to strings; see "Map" below if you need to further constrain the
           hash values.

           Other customers also bought: "HashLike" from Types::TypeTiny.

       "CodeRef"
           A value where "ref($value) eq "CODE"".

           Other customers also bought: "CodeLike" from Types::TypeTiny.

       "RegexpRef"
           A reference where "re::is_regexp($value)" is true, or a blessed reference where
           "$value->isa("Regexp")" is true.

       "GlobRef"
           A value where "ref($value) eq "GLOB"".

       "FileHandle"
           A file handle.

       "Object"
           A blessed object.

           (This also accepts regexp refs.)

   Structured
       OK, so I stole some ideas from MooseX::Types::Structured.

       "Map[`k, `v]"
           Similar to "HashRef" but parameterized with type constraints for both the key and value. The
           constraint for keys would typically be a subtype of "Str".

       "Tuple[...]"
           Subtype of "ArrayRef", accepting a list of type constraints for each slot in the array.

           "Tuple[Int, HashRef]" would match "[1, {}]" but not "[{}, 1]".

       "Dict[...]"
           Subtype of "HashRef", accepting a list of type constraints for each slot in the hash.

           For example "Dict[name => Str, id => Int]" allows "{ name => "Bob", id => 42 }".

       "Optional[`a]"
           Used in conjunction with "Dict" and "Tuple" to specify slots that are optional and may be omitted
           (but not necessarily set to an explicit undef).

           "Dict[name => Str, id => Optional[Int]]" allows "{ name => "Bob" }" but not "{ name => "Bob", id =>
           "BOB" }".

           Note that any use of "Optional[`a]" outside the context of parameterized "Dict" and "Tuple" type
           constraints makes little sense, and its behaviour is undefined. (An exception: it is used by
           Type::Params for a similar purpose to how it's used in "Tuple".)

       This module also exports a "slurpy" function, which can be used as follows.

       It can cause additional trailing values in a "Tuple" to be slurped into a structure and validated. For
       example, slurping into an ArrayRef:

          my $type = Tuple[Str, slurpy ArrayRef[Int]];

          $type->( ["Hello"] );                # ok
          $type->( ["Hello", 1, 2, 3] );       # ok
          $type->( ["Hello", [1, 2, 3]] );     # not ok

       Or into a hashref:

          my $type2 = Tuple[Str, slurpy Map[Int, RegexpRef]];

          $type2->( ["Hello"] );                               # ok
          $type2->( ["Hello", 1, qr/one/i, 2, qr/two/] );      # ok

       It can cause additional values in a "Dict" to be slurped into a hashref and validated:

          my $type3 = Dict[ values => ArrayRef, slurpy HashRef[Str] ];

          $type3->( { values => [] } );                        # ok
          $type3->( { values => [], name => "Foo" } );         # ok
          $type3->( { values => [], name => [] } );            # not ok

       In either "Tuple" or "Dict", "slurpy Any" can be used to indicate that additional values are acceptable,
       but should not be constrained in any way.

       "slurpy Any" is an optimized code path. Although the following are essentially equivalent checks, the
       former should run a lot faster:

          Tuple[Int, slurpy Any]
          Tuple[Int, slurpy ArrayRef]

   Objects
       OK, so I stole some ideas from MooX::Types::MooseLike::Base.

       "InstanceOf[`a]"
           Shortcut for a union of Type::Tiny::Class constraints.

           "InstanceOf["Foo", "Bar"]" allows objects blessed into the "Foo" or "Bar" classes, or subclasses of
           those.

           Given no parameters, just equivalent to "Object".

       "ConsumerOf[`a]"
           Shortcut for an intersection of Type::Tiny::Role constraints.

           "ConsumerOf["Foo", "Bar"]" allows objects where "$o->DOES("Foo")" and "$o->DOES("Bar")" both return
           true.

           Given no parameters, just equivalent to "Object".

       "HasMethods[`a]"
           Shortcut for a Type::Tiny::Duck constraint.

           "HasMethods["foo", "bar"]" allows objects where "$o->can("foo")" and "$o->can("bar")" both return
           true.

           Given no parameters, just equivalent to "Object".

   More
       There are a few other types exported by this function:

       "Overload[`a]"
           With no parameters, checks that the value is an overloaded object. Can be given one or more string
           parameters, which are specific operations to check are overloaded. For example, the following checks
           for objects which overload addition and subtraction.

              Overload["+", "-"]

       "Tied[`a]"
           A reference to a tied scalar, array or hash.

           Can be parameterized with a type constraint which will be applied to the object returned by the
           "tied()" function. As a convenience, can also be parameterized with a string, which will be inflated
           to a Type::Tiny::Class.

              use Types::Standard qw(Tied);
              use Type::Utils qw(class_type);

              my $My_Package = class_type { class => "My::Package" };

              tie my %h, "My::Package";
              \%h ~~ Tied;                   # true
              \%h ~~ Tied[ $My_Package ];    # true
              \%h ~~ Tied["My::Package"];    # true

              tie my $s, "Other::Package";
              \$s ~~ Tied;                   # true
              $s  ~~ Tied;                   # false !!

           If you need to check that something is specifically a reference to a tied hash, use an intersection:

              use Types::Standard qw( Tied HashRef );

              my $TiedHash = (Tied) & (HashRef);

              tie my %h, "My::Package";
              tie my $s, "Other::Package";

              \%h ~~ $TiedHash;     # true
              \$s ~~ $TiedHash;     # false

       "StrMatch[`a]"
           A string that matches a regular expression:

              declare "Distance",
                 as StrMatch[ qr{^([0-9]+)\s*(mm|cm|m|km)$} ];

           You can optionally provide a type constraint for the array of subexpressions:

              declare "Distance",
                 as StrMatch[
                    qr{^([0-9]+)\s*(.+)$},
                    Tuple[
                       Int,
                       enum(DistanceUnit => [qw/ mm cm m km /]),
                    ],
                 ];

           On certain versions of Perl, type constraints of the forms "StrMatch[qr/../" and
           "StrMatch[qr/\A..\z/" with any number of intervening dots can be optimized to simple length checks.

       "Enum[`a]"
           As per MooX::Types::MooseLike::Base:

              has size => (is => "ro", isa => Enum[qw( S M L XL XXL )]);

       "OptList"
           An arrayref of arrayrefs in the style of Data::OptList output.

       "LaxNum", "StrictNum"
           In Moose 2.09, the "Num" type constraint implementation was changed from being a wrapper around
           Scalar::Util's "looks_like_number" function to a stricter regexp (which disallows things like "-Inf"
           and "Nan").

           Types::Standard provides both implementations. "LaxNum" is measurably faster.

           The "Num" type constraint is currently an alias for "LaxNum" unless you set the
           "PERL_TYPES_STANDARD_STRICTNUM" environment variable to true before loading Types::Standard, in which
           case it becomes an alias for "StrictNum".  The constant "Types::Standard::STRICTNUM" can be used to
           check if "Num" is being strict.

           Most people should probably use "Num" or "StrictNum". Don't explicitly use "LaxNum" unless you
           specifically need an attribute which will accept things like "Inf".

       "CycleTuple[`a]"
           Similar to Tuple, but cyclical.

              CycleTuple[Int, HashRef]

           will allow "[1,{}]" and "[1,{},2,{}]" but disallow "[1,{},2]" and "[1,{},2,[]]".

           I think you understand CycleTuples already.

           Currently "Optional" and "slurpy" parameters are forbidden. There are fairly limited use cases for
           them, and it's not exactly clear what they should mean.

           The following is an efficient way of checking for an even-sized arrayref:

              CycleTuple[Any, Any]

           The following is an arrayref which would be suitable for coercing to a hashref:

              CycleTuple[Str, Any]

           All the examples so far have used two parameters, but the following is also a possible CycleTuple:

              CycleTuple[Str, Int, HashRef]

           This will be an arrayref where the 0th, 3rd, 6th, etc values are strings, the 1st, 4th, 7th, etc
           values are integers, and the 2nd, 5th, 8th, etc values are hashrefs.

   Coercions
       None of the types in this type library have any coercions by default.  However some standalone coercions
       may be exported. These can be combined with type constraints using the "plus_coercions" method.

       "MkOpt"
           A coercion from "ArrayRef", "HashRef" or "Undef" to "OptList". Example usage in a Moose attribute:

              use Types::Standard qw( OptList MkOpt );

              has options => (
                 is     => "ro",
                 isa    => OptList->plus_coercions( MkOpt ),
                 coerce => 1,
              );

       "Split[`a]"
           Split a string on a regexp.

              use Types::Standard qw( ArrayRef Str Split );

              has name => (
                 is     => "ro",
                 isa    => (ArrayRef[Str])->plus_coercions(Split[qr/\s/]),
                 coerce => 1,
              );

       "Join[`a]"
           Join an array of strings with a delimiter.

              use Types::Standard qw( Str Join );

              my $FileLines = Str->plus_coercions(Join["\n"]);

              has file_contents => (
                 is     => "ro",
                 isa    => $FileLines,
                 coerce => 1,
              );

   Constants
       "Types::Standard::STRICTNUM"
           Indicates whether "Num" is an alias for "StrictNum". (It is usually an alias for "LaxNum".)

BUGS

       Please report any bugs to <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Type-Tiny>.

SEE ALSO

       Type::Tiny::Manual.

       Type::Tiny, Type::Library, Type::Utils, Type::Coercion.

       Moose::Util::TypeConstraints, Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints, MooseX::Types::Structured.

       Types::XSD provides some type constraints based on XML Schema's data types; this includes constraints for
       ISO8601-formatted datetimes, integer ranges (e.g. "PositiveInteger[maxInclusive=>10]" and so on.

       Types::Encodings provides "Bytes" and "Chars" type constraints that were formerly found in
       Types::Standard.

       Types::Common::Numeric and Types::Common::String provide replacements for MooseX::Types::Common.

AUTHOR

       Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.

       This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017 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.