Provided by: libmoosex-params-validate-perl_0.18-1_all bug

NAME

       MooseX::Params::Validate - an extension of Params::Validate using Moose's types

VERSION

       version 0.18

SYNOPSIS

         package Foo;
         use Moose;
         use MooseX::Params::Validate;

         sub foo {
             my ( $self, %params ) = validated_hash(
                 \@_,
                 bar => { isa => 'Str', default => 'Moose' },
             );
             return "Hooray for $params{bar}!";
         }

         sub bar {
             my $self = shift;
             my ( $foo, $baz, $gorch ) = validated_list(
                 \@_,
                 foo   => { isa => 'Foo' },
                 baz   => { isa => 'ArrayRef | HashRef', optional => 1 },
                 gorch => { isa => 'ArrayRef[Int]', optional => 1 }
             );
             [ $foo, $baz, $gorch ];
         }

DESCRIPTION

       This module fills a gap in Moose by adding method parameter validation to Moose. This is
       just one of many developing options, it should not be considered the "official" one by any
       means though.

       You might also want to explore "MooseX::Method::Signatures" and "MooseX::Declare".

CAVEATS

       It is not possible to introspect the method parameter specs; they are created as needed
       when the method is called and cached for subsequent calls.

EXPORTS

       validated_hash( \@_, %parameter_spec )
           This behaves similarly to the standard Params::Validate "validate" function and
           returns the captured values in a HASH. The one exception is where if it spots an
           instance in the @_, then it will handle it appropriately (unlike Params::Validate
           which forces you to shift you $self first).

           The values in @_ can either be a set of name-value pairs or a single hash reference.

           The %parameter_spec accepts the following options:

           isa The "isa" option can be either; class name, Moose type constraint name or an anon
               Moose type constraint.

           does
               The "does" option can be either; role name or an anon Moose type constraint.

           default
               This is the default value to be used if the value is not supplied.

           optional
               As with Params::Validate, all options are considered required unless otherwise
               specified. This option is passed directly to Params::Validate.

           coerce
               If this is true and the parameter has a type constraint which has coercions, then
               the coercion will be called for this parameter. If the type does have coercions,
               then this parameter is ignored.

           This function is also available under its old name, "validate".

       validated_list( \@_, %parameter_spec )
           The %parameter_spec accepts the same options as above, but returns the parameters as
           positional values instead of a HASH. This is best explained by example:

             sub foo {
                 my ( $self, $foo, $bar ) = validated_list(
                     \@_,
                     foo => { isa => 'Foo' },
                     bar => { isa => 'Bar' },
                 );
                 $foo->baz($bar);
             }

           We capture the order in which you defined the parameters and then return them as a
           list in the same order. If a param is marked optional and not included, then it will
           be set to "undef".

           The values in @_ can either be a set of name-value pairs or a single hash reference.

           Like "validated_hash", if it spots an object instance as the first parameter of @_, it
           will handle it appropriately, returning it as the first argument.

           This function is also available under its old name, "validatep".

       pos_validated_list( \@_, $spec, $spec, ... )
           This function validates a list of positional parameters. Each $spec should validate
           one of the parameters in the list:

             sub foo {
                 my $self = shift;
                 my ( $foo, $bar ) = pos_validated_list(
                     \@_,
                     { isa => 'Foo' },
                     { isa => 'Bar' },
                 );

                 ...
             }

           Unlike the other functions, this function cannot find $self in the argument list. Make
           sure to shift it off yourself before doing validation.

           The values in @_ must be a list of values. You cannot pass the values as an array
           reference, because this cannot be distinguished from passing one value which is itself
           an array reference.

           If a parameter is marked as optional and is not present, it will simply not be
           returned.

           If you want to pass in any of the cache control parameters described below, simply
           pass them after the list of parameter validation specs:

             sub foo {
                 my $self = shift;
                 my ( $foo, $bar ) = pos_validated_list(
                     \@_,
                     { isa => 'Foo' },
                     { isa => 'Bar' },
                     MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_NO_CACHE => 1,
                 );

                 ...
             }

ALLOWING EXTRA PARAMETERS

       By default, any parameters not mentioned in the parameter spec cause this module to throw
       an error. However, you can have have this module simply ignore them by setting
       "MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_ALLOW_EXTRA" to a true value when calling a validation subroutine.

       When calling "validated_hash" or "pos_validated_list" the extra parameters are simply
       returned in the hash or list as appropriate. However, when you call "validated_list" the
       extra parameters will not be returned at all. You can get them by looking at the original
       value of @_.

EXPORTS

       By default, this module exports the "validated_hash", "validated_list", and
       "pos_validated_list".

       If you would prefer to import the now deprecated functions "validate" and "validatep"
       instead, you can use the ":deprecated" tag to import them.

IMPORTANT NOTE ON CACHING

       When a validation subroutine is called the first time, the parameter spec is prepared and
       cached to avoid unnecessary regeneration. It uses the fully qualified name of the
       subroutine (package + subname) as the cache key.  In 99.999% of the use cases for this
       module, that will be the right thing to do.

       However, I have (ab)used this module occasionally to handle dynamic sets of parameters. In
       this special use case you can do a couple things to better control the caching behavior.

       •   Passing in the "MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_NO_CACHE" flag in the parameter spec this will
           prevent the parameter spec from being cached.

             sub foo {
                 my ( $self, %params ) = validated_hash(
                     \@_,
                     foo                         => { isa => 'Foo' },
                     MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_NO_CACHE => 1,
                 );

             }

       •   Passing in "MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_CACHE_KEY" with a value to be used as the cache key
           will bypass the normal cache key generation.

             sub foo {
                 my ( $self, %params ) = validated_hash(
                     \@_,
                     foo                          => { isa => 'Foo' },
                     MX_PARAMS_VALIDATE_CACHE_KEY => 'foo-42',
                 );

             }

MAINTAINER

       Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>

BUGS

       Please submit bugs to the CPAN RT system at
       http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=moosex-params-validate or via email at
       bug-moosex-params-validate@rt.cpan.org.

AUTHORS

       •   Stevan Little <stevan.little@iinteractive.com>

       •   Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Stevan Little <stevan.little@iinteractive.com>.

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