Provided by: libmoosex-getopt-perl_0.59-1_all
NAME
MooseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute - Optional meta attribute for custom option names
VERSION
version 0.59
SYNOPSIS
package App; use Moose; with 'MooseX::Getopt'; has 'data' => ( metaclass => 'Getopt', is => 'ro', isa => 'Str', default => 'file.dat', # tells MooseX::Getopt to use --somedata as the # command line flag instead of the normal # autogenerated one (--data) cmd_flag => 'somedata', # tells MooseX::Getopt to also allow --moosedata, # -m, and -d as aliases for this same option on # the commandline. cmd_aliases => [qw/ moosedata m d /], # Or, you can use a plain scalar for a single alias: cmd_aliases => 'm', );
DESCRIPTION
This is a custom attribute metaclass which can be used to specify a the specific command line flag to use instead of the default one which MooseX::Getopt will create for you. This is certainly not the prettiest way to go about this, but for now it works for those who might need such a feature. Use 'traits' instead of 'metaclass' You should rarely need to explicitly set the attribute metaclass. It is much preferred to simply provide a trait (a role applied to the attribute metaclass), which allows other code to further modify the attribute by applying additional roles. Therefore, you should first try to do this: has 'foo' => (traits => ['Getopt'], cmd_flag => 'f'); Custom Metaclass alias This now takes advantage of the Moose 0.19 feature to support custom attribute metaclass aliases. This means you can also use this as the Getopt alias, like so: has 'foo' => (metaclass => 'Getopt', cmd_flag => 'f');
METHODS
cmd_flag Changes the command-line flag to be this value, instead of the default, which is the same as the attribute name. cmd_aliases Adds more aliases for this command-line flag, useful for short options and such. has_cmd_flag has_cmd_aliases
AUTHOR
Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2007 by Infinity Interactive, Inc. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.