Provided by: libmoosex-blessed-reconstruct-perl_0.04-2_all bug

NAME

       MooseX::Blessed::Reconstruct - A Data::Visitor for creating Moose objects from blessed
       placeholders

SYNOPSIS

               use MooseX::Blessed::Reconstruct;

               my $obj = bless( {
                       init_arg_foo => "Blah",
                       arf => "yay",
               }, "Foo" );

               my $proper = MooseX::Blessed::Reconstruct->new->visit($obj);

               # equivalent to:

               my $proper = Foo->meta->new_object(%$obj);

               # but recursive (and works with shared references)

DESCRIPTION

       The purpose of this module is to "fix up" blessed data into a real Moose object.

       This is used internally by MooseX::YAML but has no implementation details having to do
       with YAML itself.

METHODS

       See Data::Visitor

       visit_object $object
           Calls "load_class" in Class::MOP on the "ref" of $object.

           If there's a metaclass, calls "visit_object_with_meta", otherwise "visit_ref" is used
           to walk the object brutishly.

           Returns a deep clone of the input structure with all the Moose objects reconstructed
           "properly".

       visit_object_with_meta $obj, $meta
           Uses the metaclass $meta to create a new instance, registers the instance with
           Data::Visitor's cycle tracking, and then inflates it using "new_object" in
           Moose::Meta::Class.

       prepare_args $obj
           Collapses $obj into key value pairs to be used as init args to "new_object" in
           Moose::Meta::Class.

VERSION CONTROL

       This module is maintained using Darcs. You can get the latest version from
       <http://nothingmuch.woobling.org/code>, and use "darcs send" to commit changes.

AUTHOR

       Jonathan Rockway

       Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch@woobling.org>

COPYRIGHT

               Copyright (c) 2008 Infinity Interactive, Yuval Kogman. All rights
               reserved This program is free software; you can redistribute
               it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.