Provided by: libmoosex-aliases-perl_0.11-1_all bug

NAME

       MooseX::Aliases - easy aliasing of methods and attributes in Moose

VERSION

       version 0.11

SYNOPSIS

           package MyApp;
           use Moose;
           use MooseX::Aliases;

           has this => (
               isa   => 'Str',
               is    => 'rw',
               alias => 'that',
           );

           sub foo { my $self = shift; print $self->that }
           alias bar => 'foo';

           my $o = MyApp->new();
           $o->this('Hello World');
           $o->bar; # prints 'Hello World'

       or

           package MyApp::Role;
           use Moose::Role;
           use MooseX::Aliases;

           has this => (
               isa   => 'Str',
               is    => 'rw',
               alias => 'that',
           );

           sub foo { my $self = shift; print $self->that }
           alias bar => 'foo';

DESCRIPTION

       The MooseX::Aliases module will allow you to quickly alias methods in Moose. It provides
       an alias parameter for "has()" to generate aliased accessors as well as the standard ones.
       Attributes can also be initialized in the constructor via their aliased names.

       You can create more than one alias at once by passing a arrayref:

           has ip_addr => (
               alias => [ qw(ipAddr ip) ],
           );

FUNCTIONS

   alias ALIAS METHODNAME
       Installs ALIAS as a method that is aliased to the method METHODNAME.

ALIASING VERSUS OTHER MOOSE FEATURES

   Aliasing versus inheritance
           {
               package Parent;
               use Moose;
               use MooseX::Aliases;
               sub method1 { "A" }
               alias method2 => "method1";
           }

           {
               package Child1;
               use Moose;
               extends "Parent";
               sub method1 { "B" }
           }

           {
               package Child2;
               use Moose;
               extends "Parent";
               sub method2 { "C" }
           }

       In the example above, Child1 overrides the method using its original name ("method1"). As
       a result, calling "method1" or "method2" returns "B". Child2 overrides the method using
       its alias ("method2"). As a result, calling "method2" returns "C", but calling "method1"
       falls through to the parent class, so returns "A".

   Aliasing versus method modifiers
           {
               package Class1;
               use Moose;
               use MooseX::Aliases;
               sub method1 { "A" }
               alias method2 => "method1";
               around method1 => sub { "B" };
           }

           {
               package Class2;
               use Moose;
               use MooseX::Aliases;
               sub method1 { "A" }
               alias method2 => "method1";
               around method2 => sub { "B" };
           }

       In the example above, Class1's around modifier modifies the method using its original
       name. As a result, both "method1" and "method2" return "B". Class2's around modifier
       modifies the alias, so "method2" returns "B", but "method1" continues to return "A".

BUGS

       No known bugs.

       Please report any bugs to GitHub Issues at <https://github.com/doy/moosex-aliases/issues>.

SEE ALSO

       Method::Alias

SUPPORT

       You can find this documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

           perldoc MooseX::Aliases

       You can also look for information at:

       •   MetaCPAN

           <https://metacpan.org/release/MooseX-Aliases>

       •   Github

           <https://github.com/doy/moosex-aliases>

       •   RT: CPAN's request tracker

           <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=MooseX-Aliases>

       •   CPAN Ratings

           <http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/MooseX-Aliases>

AUTHORS

       •   Jesse Luehrs <doy@tozt.net>

       •   Chris Prather <chris@prather.org>

       •   Justin Hunter <justin.d.hunter@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Jesse Luehrs.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.