Provided by: libtype-tiny-perl_1.016008-1_all bug

NAME

       Type::Tiny::Manual::Coercions - advanced information on coercions

MANUAL

       This section of the manual assumes you've already read Type::Tiny::Manual::UsingWithMoo.

       Type::Tiny takes a slightly different approach to type constraints from Moose.  In Moose,
       there is a single flat namespace for type constraints. Moose defines a type constraint
       called Str for strings and a type constraint called ArrayRef for arrayrefs. If you want to
       define strings differently (maybe you think that the empty string doesn't really count as
       a string, or maybe you think objects overloading "q[""]" should count as strings) then you
       can't call it Str; you need to choose a different name.

       With Type::Tiny, two type libraries can each offer a string type constraint with their own
       definitions for what counts as a string, and you can choose which one to import, or import
       them both with different names:

         use Some::Types qw( Str );
         use Other::Types "Str" => { -as => "Str2" };

       This might seem to be a small advantage of Type::Tiny, but where this global-versus-local
       philosophy really makes a difference is coercions.

       Let's imagine for a part of your application that deals with reading username and password
       data you need to have a "username:password" string. You may wish to accept a "[$username,
       $password]" arrayref and coerce it to a string using "join ":", @$arrayref". But another
       part of your application deals with slurping log files, and wants to coerce a string from
       an arrayref using "join "\n", @$arrayref". These are both perfectly sensible ways to
       coerce an arrayref. In Moose, a typical way to do this would be:

         package My::UserManager {
           use Moose;
           use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;

           coerce 'Str',
             from 'ArrayRef', via { join ":", @$_ };

           ...;
         }

         package My::LogReader {
           use Moose;
           use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;

           coerce 'Str',
             from 'ArrayRef', via { join "\n", @$_ };

           ...;
         }

       However, because in Moose all types and coercions are global, if both these classes are
       loaded, only one of them will work. One class will overrule the other's coercion. Which
       one "wins" will depend on load order.

       It is possible to solve this with Moose native types, but it requires extra work. (The
       solution is for My::UserManager and My::LogReader to each create a subtype of Str and
       define the coercion on that subtype instead of on Str directly.)

       Type::Tiny solves this in two ways:

       1.  Type::Tiny makes it possible for type libraries to "protect" their type constraints to
           prevent external code from adding new coercions to them.

             $type->coercion->freeze();

           You can freeze coercions for your entire type library using:

             __PACKAGE__->make_immutable;

           If you try to add coercions to a type constraint that has frozen coercions, it will
           throw an error.

             use Types::Standard qw( Str ArrayRef );

             Str->coercion->add_type_coercions(
               ArrayRef, sub { join "\n", @$_ },
             );

       2.  Type::Tiny makes the above-mentioned pattern of adding coercions to a subtype much
           easier.

             use Types::Standard ( Str ArrayRef );

             my $subtype = Str->plus_coercions(
               ArrayRef, sub { join "\n", @$_ },
             );

           The "plus_coercions" method creates a new child type, adds new coercions to it, copies
           any existing coercions from the parent type, and then freezes coercions for the new
           child type.

           The end result is you now have a "copy" of Str that can coerce from ArrayRef but other
           copies of Str won't be affected by your coercion.

   Defining Coercions within Type Libraries
       Some coercions like joining an arrayref to make a string are not going to be coercions
       that everybody will agree on. Join with a line break in between them as above? Or with a
       colon, a tab, a space, some other chanaracter? It depends a lot on your application.

       Others, like coercing a Path::Tiny object from a string, are likely to be very obvious. It
       is this kind of coercion that it makes sense to define within the library itself so it's
       available to any packages that use the library.

         my $pt = __PACKAGE__->add_type(
           Type::Tiny::Class->new(
             name    => 'Path',
             class   => 'Path::Tiny',
           ),
         );

         $pt->coercion->add_type_coercions(
           Str, q{ Path::Tiny::path($_) },
         );

         $pt->coercion->freeze;

   Tweak Coercions Outside Type Libraries
       The "plus_coercions" method creates a new type constraint with additional coercions. If
       the original type already had coercions, the new coercions have a higher priority.

       There's also a "plus_fallback_coercions" method which does the same as "plus_coercions"
       but adds the new coercions with a lower priority than any existing ones.

       Type::Tiny::Class provides a "plus_constructors" method as a shortcut for coercing via a
       constructor method. The following two are the same:

         Path->plus_constructors(Str, "new")

         Path->plus_coercions(Str, q{ Path::Tiny->new($_) })

       To create a type constraint without particular existing coercions, you can use
       "minus_coercions". The following uses the Datetime type defined in
       Type::Tiny::Manual::Libraries, removing the coercion from Int but keeping the coercions
       from Undef and Dict.

         use Types::Standard qw( Int );
         use Example::Types qw( Datetime );

         has start_date => (
           is      => 'ro',
           isa     => Datetime->minus_coercions(Int),
           coerce  => 1,
         );

       There's also a "no_coercions" method that creates a subtype with no coercions at all. This
       is most useful either to create a "blank slate" for "plus_coercions":

         my $Path = Path->no_coercions->plus_coercions(Str, sub { ... });

       Or to disable coercions for Type::Params. Type::Params will always automatically coerce a
       parameter if there is a coercion for that type.

         use Types::Standard qw( Object );
         use Types::Common::String qw( UpperCaseStr );
         use Type::Params;

         sub set_account_name {
           state $check = compile( Object, UpperCaseStr->no_coercions );
           my ($self, $name) = $check->(@_);
           $self->_account_name($name);
           $self->db->update($self);
           return $self;
         }

         # This will die instead of coercing from lowercase
         $robert->_set_account_name('bob');

   Named Coercions
       A compromise between defining a coercion in the type library or defining them in the
       package that uses the type library is for a type library to define a named collection of
       coercions which can be optionally added to a type constraint.

         {
           package MyApp::Types;
           use Type::Library -base;
           use Type::Utils qw( extends );

           BEGIN { extends 'Types::Standard' };

           __PACKAGE__->add_coercion(
             name              => "FromLines",
             type_constraint   => ArrayRef,
             type_coercion_map => [
               Str,     q{ [split /\n/] },
               Undef,   q{ [] },
             ],
           );
         }

       This set of coercions has a name and can be imported and used:

         use MyApp::Types qw( ArrayRef FromLines );

         has lines => (
           is      => 'ro',
           isa     => ArrayRef->plus_coercions( FromLines ),
           coerce  => 1,
         );

       Types::Standard defines a named coercion MkOpt designed to be used for OptList.

         use Types::Standard qw( OptList MkOpt );
         my $OptList = OptList->plus_coercions(MkOpt);

   Parameterized Coercions
       Named coercions can also be parameterizable.

         my $ArrayOfLines = ArrayRef->plus_coercions( Split[ qr{\n} ] );

       Types::Standard defines Split and Join parameterizable coercions.

       Viewing the source code for Types::Standard should give you hints as to how they are
       implemented.

   "Deep" Coercions
       Certain parameterized type constraints can automatically acquire coercions if their
       parameters have coercions. For example:

          ArrayRef[ Int->plus_coercions(Num, q{int($_)}) ]

       ... does what you mean!

       The parameterized type constraints that do this magic include the following ones from
       Types::Standard:

       •   ScalarRefArrayRefHashRefMapTupleCycleTupleDictOptionalMaybe

       Imagine we're defining a type Paths in a type library:

         __PACKAGE__->add_type(
           name      => 'Paths',
           parent    => ArrayRef[Path],
         );

       The Path type has a coercion from Str, so Paths should be able to coerce from an arrayref
       of strings, right?

       Wrong! Although ArrayRef[Path] could coerce from an arrayref of strings, Paths is a
       separate type constraint which, although it inherits from ArrayRef[Path] has its own
       (currently empty) set of coercions.

       Because that is often not what you want, Type::Tiny provides a shortcut when declaring a
       subtype to copy the parent type constraint's coercions:

         __PACKAGE__->add_type(
           name      => 'Paths',
           parent    => ArrayRef[Path],
           coercion  => 1,   # inherit
         );

       Now Paths can coerce from an arrayref of strings.

       Deep Caveat

       Currently there exists ill-defined behaviour resulting from mixing deep coercions and
       mutable (non-frozen) coercions. Consider the following:

          class_type Path, { class => "Path::Tiny" };
          coerce Path,
             from Str, via { "Path::Tiny"->new($_) };

          declare Paths, as ArrayRef[Path], coercion => 1;

          coerce Path,
             from InstanceOf["My::File"], via { $_->get_path };

       An arrayref of strings can now be coerced to an arrayref of Path::Tiny objects, but is it
       also now possible to coerce an arrayref of My::File objects to an arrayref of Path::Tiny
       objects?

       Currently the answer is "no", but this is mostly down to implementation details. It's not
       clear what the best way to behave in this situation is, and it could start working at some
       point in the future.

       This is why you should freeze coercions.

   Chained Coercions
       Consider the following type library:

          package Types::Geometric {
             use Type::Library -base, -declare => qw(
                VectorArray
                VectorArray3D
                Point
                Point3D
             );
             use Type::Utils;
             use Types::Standard qw( Num Tuple InstanceOf );

             declare VectorArray,
                as Tuple[Num, Num];

             declare VectorArray3D,
                as Tuple[Num, Num, Num];

             coerce VectorArray3D,
                from VectorArray, via {
                   [ @$_, 0 ];
                };

             class_type Point, { class => "Point" };

             coerce Point,
                from VectorArray, via {
                   Point->new(x => $_->[0], y => $_->[1]);
                };

             class_type Point3D, { class => "Point3D" };

             coerce Point3D,
                from VectorArray3D, via {
                   Point3D->new(x => $_->[0], y => $_->[1], z => $_->[2]);
                },
                from Point, via {
                   Point3D->new(x => $_->x, y => $_->y, z => 0);
                };
          }

       Given an arrayref "[1, 1]" you might reasonably expect it to be coercible to a Point3D
       object; it matches the type constraint VectorArray so can be coerced to VectorArray3D and
       thus to Point3D.

       However, Type::Coercion does not automatically chain coercions like this. Firstly, it
       would be incompatible with Moose's type coercion system which does not chain coercions.
       Secondly, it's ambiguous; in our example, the arrayref could be coerced along two
       different paths (via VectorArray3D or via Point); in this case the end result would be the
       same, but in other cases it might not. Thirdly, it runs the risk of accidentally creating
       loops.

       Doing the chaining manually though is pretty simple. Firstly, we'll take note of the
       "coercibles" method in Type::Tiny. This method called as "VectorArray3D->coercibles"
       returns a type constraint meaning "anything that can be coerced to a VectorArray3D".

       So we can define the coercions for Point3D as:

          coerce Point3D,
             from VectorArray3D->coercibles, via {
                my $tmp = to_VectorArray3D($_);
                Point3D->new(x => $tmp->[0], y => $tmp->[1], z => $tmp->[2]);
             },
             from Point, via {
                Point3D->new(x => $_->x, y => $_->y, z => 0);
             };

       ... and now coercing from "[1, 1]" will work.

SEE ALSO

       Moose::Manual::BestPractices,
       <https://web.archive.org/web/20090624164256/http://www.catalyzed.org/2009/06/keeping-your-coercions-to-yourself.html>,
       MooseX::Types::MoreUtils.

NEXT STEPS

       After that last example, probably have a little lie down. Once you're recovered, here's
       your next step:

       •   Type::Tiny::Manual::AllTypes

           An alphabetical list of all type constraints bundled with Type::Tiny.

AUTHOR

       Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

       This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017-2022 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.