Provided by: libtype-tiny-perl_1.000005-1_all bug

NAME

       Type::Tiny - tiny, yet Moo(se)-compatible type constraint

SYNOPSIS

          use Scalar::Util qw(looks_like_number);
          use Type::Tiny;

          my $NUM = "Type::Tiny"->new(
             name       => "Number",
             constraint => sub { looks_like_number($_) },
             message    => sub { "$_ ain't a number" },
          );

          package Ermintrude {
             use Moo;
             has favourite_number => (is => "ro", isa => $NUM);
          }

          package Bullwinkle {
             use Moose;
             has favourite_number => (is => "ro", isa => $NUM);
          }

          package Maisy {
             use Mouse;
             has favourite_number => (is => "ro", isa => $NUM);
          }

STATUS

       This module is covered by the Type-Tiny stability policy.

DESCRIPTION

       Type::Tiny is a tiny class for creating Moose-like type constraint objects which are compatible with Moo,
       Moose and Mouse.

       Maybe now we won't need to have separate MooseX, MouseX and MooX versions of everything? We can but
       hope...

       This documents the internals of Type::Tiny. Type::Tiny::Manual is a better starting place if you're new.

   Constructor
       "new(%attributes)"
           Moose-style constructor function.

   Attributes
       Attributes  are  named  values  that  may  be  passed  to the constructor. For each attribute, there is a
       corresponding reader method. For example:

          my $type = Type::Tiny->new( name => "Foo" );
          print $type->name, "\n";   # says "Foo"

       Important attributes

       These are the attributes you are likely to be most interested in providing when creating  your  own  type
       constraints, and most interested in reading when dealing with type constraint objects.

       "constraint"
           Coderef  to  validate a value ($_) against the type constraint. The coderef will not be called unless
           the value is known to pass any parent type constraint (see "parent" below).

           Defaults to "sub { 1 }" - i.e. a coderef that passes all values.

       "parent"
           Optional attribute; parent type constraint. For example, an "Integer" type constraint  might  have  a
           parent "Number".

           If provided, must be a Type::Tiny object.

       "inlined"
           A coderef which returns a string of Perl code suitable for inlining this type. Optional.

           If  "constraint"  (above)  is  a  coderef  generated  via  Sub::Quote, then Type::Tiny may be able to
           automatically generate "inlined" for you.

       "name"
           The name of the type constraint. These need to conform to certain naming rules (they must begin  with
           an uppercase letter and continue using only letters, digits 0-9 and underscores).

           Optional; if not supplied will be an anonymous type constraint.

       "display_name"
           A name to display for the type constraint when stringified. These don't have to conform to any naming
           rules. Optional; a default name will be calculated from the "name".

       "library"
           The  package  name  of  the type library this type is associated with.  Optional. Informational only:
           setting this attribute does not install the type into the package.

       "message"
           Coderef that returns an error message when $_ does not validate against the type constraint. Optional
           (there's a vaguely sensible default.)

       "coercion"
           A Type::Coercion object associated with this type.

           Generally speaking this attribute should not be passed to the constructor; you  should  rely  on  the
           default lazily-built coercion object.

           You  may  pass  "coercion => 1" to the constructor to inherit coercions from the constraint's parent.
           (This requires the parent constraint to have a coercion.)

       "my_methods"
           Experimenal hashref of additional methods that can be called on the type constraint object.

       Attributes related to parameterizable and parameterized types

       The following additional attributes are used for parameterizable  (e.g.   "ArrayRef")  and  parameterized
       (e.g. "ArrayRef[Int]") type constraints. Unlike Moose, these aren't handled by separate subclasses.

       "constraint_generator"
           Coderef  that  generates a new constraint coderef based on parameters.  Alternatively, the constraint
           generator  can  return  a  fully-formed  Type::Tiny  object,  in  which  case  the  "name_generator",
           "inline_generator", and "coercion_generator" attributes documented below are ignored.

           Optional; providing a generator makes this type into a parameterizable type constraint.

       "name_generator"
           A  coderef  which  generates  a  new  display_name  based  on  parameters.   Optional; the default is
           reasonable.

       "inline_generator"
           A coderef which generates a new inlining coderef based on parameters.

       "coercion_generator"
           A coderef which generates a new Type::Coercion object based on parameters.

       "deep_explanation"
           This API is not finalized. Coderef used by Error::TypeTiny::Assertion to  peek  inside  parameterized
           types and figure out why a value doesn't pass the constraint.

       "parameters"
           In parameterized types, returns an arrayref of the parameters.

       Lazy generated attributes

       The  following  attributes should not be usually passed to the constructor; unless you're doing something
       especially unusual, you should rely on the default lazily-built return values.

       "compiled_check"
           Coderef to validate a value ($_[0]) against the type constraint.  This coderef is  expected  to  also
           handle all validation for the parent type constraints.

       "complementary_type"
           A  complementary type for this type. For example, the complementary type for an integer type would be
           all things that are not integers, including floating point  numbers,  but  also  alphabetic  strings,
           arrayrefs, filehandles, etc.

       "moose_type", "mouse_type"
           Objects   equivalent   to   this   type   constraint,   but   as   a  Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint  or
           Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint.

           It should rarely be necessary to obtain a Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint object from Type::Tiny  because
           the  Type::Tiny  object itself should be usable pretty much anywhere a Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint is
           expected.

   Methods
       Predicate methods

       These methods return booleans indicating information about the type constraint.  They  are  each  tightly
       associated with a particular attribute.  (See "Attributes".)

       "has_parent", "has_library", "has_inlined", "has_constraint_generator", "has_inline_generator",
       "has_coercion_generator", "has_parameters", "has_message", "has_deep_explanation"
           Simple Moose-style predicate methods indicating the presence or absence of an attribute.

       "has_coercion"
           Predicate method with a little extra DWIM. Returns false if the coercion is a no-op.

       "is_anon"
           Returns true iff the type constraint does not have a "name".

       "is_parameterized", "is_parameterizable"
           Indicates  whether a type has been parameterized (e.g. "ArrayRef[Int]") or could potentially be (e.g.
           "ArrayRef").

       Validation and coercion

       The following methods are used for coercing and validating values against a type constraint:

       "check($value)"
           Returns true iff the value passes the type constraint.

       "validate($value)"
           Returns the error message for the value; returns an explicit undef  if  the  value  passes  the  type
           constraint.

       "assert_valid($value)"
           Like "check($value)" but dies if the value does not pass the type constraint.

           Yes, that's three very similar methods. Blame Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint whose API I'm attempting to
           emulate. :-)

       "assert_return($value)"
           Like "assert_valid($value)" but returns the value if it passes the type constraint.

           This  seems  a  more  useful  behaviour  than  "assert_valid($value)".  I  would  have  just  changed
           "assert_valid($value)" to do this, except that there are  edge  cases  where  it  could  break  Moose
           compatibility.

       "get_message($value)"
           Returns the error message for the value; even if the value passes the type constraint.

       "validate_explain($value, $varname)"
           Like  "validate" but instead of a string error message, returns an arrayref of strings explaining the
           reasoning why the value does not meet the type constraint, examining parent types, etc.

           The $varname is an optional string like '$foo' indicating the name of the variable being checked.

       "coerce($value)"
           Attempt to coerce $value to this type.

       "assert_coerce($value)"
           Attempt to coerce $value to this type. Throws an exception if this is not possible.

       Child type constraint creation and parameterization

       These methods generate new type constraint objects that inherit from the constraint they are called upon:

       "create_child_type(%attributes)"
           Construct a new Type::Tiny object with this object as its parent.

       "where($coderef)"
           Shortcut for creating  an  anonymous  child  type  constraint.  Use  it  like  "HashRef->where(sub  {
           exists($_->{name}) })". That said, you can get a similar result using overloaded "&":

              HashRef & sub { exists($_->{name}) }

       "child_type_class"
           The class that create_child_type will construct by default.

       "parameterize(@parameters)"
           Creates a new parameterized type; throws an exception if called on a non-parameterizable type.

       "of(@parameters)"
           A cute alias for "parameterize". Use it like "ArrayRef->of(Int)".

       "plus_coercions($type1, $code1, ...)"
           Shorthand  for  creating  a  new  child type constraint with the same coercions as this one, but then
           adding some extra coercions (at a higher priority than the existing ones).

       "plus_fallback_coercions($type1, $code1, ...)"
           Like "plus_coercions", but added at a lower priority.

       "minus_coercions($type1, ...)"
           Shorthand for creating a new child type constraint with fewer type coercions.

       "no_coercions"
           Shorthand for creating a new child type constraint with no coercions at all.

       Type relationship introspection methods

       These methods allow you to determine a type constraint's relationship to other  type  constraints  in  an
       organised hierarchy:

       "equals($other)", "is_subtype_of($other)", "is_supertype_of($other)", "is_a_type_of($other)"
           Compare  two  types.  See  Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint  for  what these all mean.  (OK, Moose doesn't
           define "is_supertype_of", but you get the idea, right?)

           Note that these have a slightly DWIM side to them. If you create two Type::Tiny::Class objects  which
           test the same class, they're considered equal. And:

              my $subtype_of_Num = Types::Standard::Num->create_child_type;
              my $subtype_of_Int = Types::Standard::Int->create_child_type;
              $subtype_of_Int->is_subtype_of( $subtype_of_Num );  # true

       "strictly_equals($other)", "is_strictly_subtype_of($other)", "is_strictly_supertype_of($other)",
       "is_strictly_a_type_of($other)"
           Stricter  versions  of  the type comparison functions. These only care about explicit inheritance via
           "parent".

              my $subtype_of_Num = Types::Standard::Num->create_child_type;
              my $subtype_of_Int = Types::Standard::Int->create_child_type;
              $subtype_of_Int->is_strictly_subtype_of( $subtype_of_Num );  # false

       "parents"
           Returns a list of all this type constraint's ancestor constraints. For  example,  if  called  on  the
           "Str" type constraint would return the list "(Value, Defined, Item, Any)".

           Due  to  a  historical  misunderstanding, this differs from the Moose implementation of the "parents"
           method. In Moose, "parents" only returns the immediate parent  type  constraints,  and  because  type
           constraints  only have one immediate parent, this is effectively an alias for "parent". The extension
           module MooseX::Meta::TypeConstraint::Intersection is the only place where multiple  type  constraints
           are returned; and they are returned as an arrayref in violation of the base class' documentation. I'm
           keeping my behaviour as it seems more useful.

       "find_parent($coderef)"
           Loops  through  the  parent  type  constraints  including the invocant itself and returns the nearest
           ancestor type constraint where the coderef  evaluates  to  true.  Within  the  coderef  the  ancestor
           currently being checked is $_. Returns undef if there is no match.

           In  list context also returns the number of type constraints which had been looped through before the
           matching constraint was found.

       "coercibles"
           Return a type constraint which is the union of type constraints that  can  be  coerced  to  this  one
           (including this one). If this type constraint has no coercions, returns itself.

       "type_parameter"
           In  parameterized  type  constraints,  returns  the  first  item on the list of parameters; otherwise
           returns undef. For example:

              ( ArrayRef[Int] )->type_parameter;    # returns Int
              ( ArrayRef[Int] )->parent;            # returns ArrayRef

           Note that parameterizable type  constraints  can  perfectly  legitimately  take  multiple  parameters
           (several  off  the  parameterizable type constraints in Types::Standard do). This method only returns
           the first such parameter.  "Attributes related to parameterizable and parameterized types"  documents
           the "parameters" attribute, which returns an arrayref of all the parameters.

       Inlining methods

       The  following  methods  are  used  to  generate  strings  of  Perl code which may be pasted into stringy
       "eval"uated subs to perform type checks:

       "can_be_inlined"
           Returns boolean indicating if this type can be inlined.

       "inline_check($varname)"
           Creates a type constraint check for a particular variable as a string of Perl code. For example:

              print( Types::Standard::Num->inline_check('$foo') );

           prints the following output:

              (!ref($foo) && Scalar::Util::looks_like_number($foo))

           For Moose-compat, there is an alias "_inline_check" for this method.

       "inline_assert($varname)"
           Much like "inline_check" but outputs a statement of the form:

              die ... unless ...;

           Note that if this type has a custom error message, the inlined code will ignore this custom message!!

       Other methods

       "qualified_name"
           For non-anonymous type constraints that have a library, returns a qualified "MyLib::MyType"  sort  of
           name. Otherwise, returns the same as "name".

       "isa($class)", "can($method)", "AUTOLOAD(@args)"
           If   Moose   is   loaded,   then   the   combination   of   these   methods   is   used   to  mock  a
           Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint.

           If Mouse is loaded, then "isa" mocks Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint.

       "DOES($role)"
           Overridden to advertise support for various roles.

           See also Type::API::Constraint, etc.

       "TIESCALAR", "TIEARRAY", "TIEHASH"
           These are provided as hooks that wrap Type::Tie. (Type::Tie is distributed  separately,  and  can  be
           used with non-Type::Tiny type constraints too.) They allow the following to work:

              use Types::Standard qw(Int);
              tie my @list, Int;
              push @list, 123, 456;   # ok
              push @list, "Hello";    # dies

       The following methods exist for Moose/Mouse compatibility, but do not do anything useful.

       "compile_type_constraint"
       "hand_optimized_type_constraint"
       "has_hand_optimized_type_constraint"
       "inline_environment"
       "meta"

   Overloading
       •   Stringification is overloaded to return the qualified name.

       •   Boolification is overloaded to always return true.

       •   Coderefification is overloaded to call "assert_return".

       •   On Perl 5.10.1 and above, smart match is overloaded to call "check".

       •   The "==" operator is overloaded to call "equals".

       •   The "<" and ">" operators are overloaded to call "is_subtype_of" and "is_supertype_of".

       •   The "~" operator is overloaded to call "complementary_type".

       •   The "|" operator is overloaded to build a union of two type constraints.  See Type::Tiny::Union.

       •   The   "&"   operator   is  overloaded  to  build  the  intersection  of  two  type  constraints.  See
           Type::Tiny::Intersection.

       Previous  versions  of  Type::Tiny  would  overload  the  "+"  operator  to  call   "plus_coercions"   or
       "plus_fallback_coercions" as appropriate.  Support for this was dropped after 0.040.

   Constants
       "Type::Tiny::SUPPORT_SMARTMATCH"
           Indicates whether the smart match overload is supported on your version of Perl.

   Package Variables
       $Type::Tiny::DD
           This  undef  by  default  but may be set to a coderef that Type::Tiny and related modules will use to
           dump data structures in things like error messages.

           Otherwise Type::Tiny uses it's own routine to dump data structures.  $DD may then be set to a  number
           to limit the lengths of the dumps. (Default limit is 72.)

           This is a package variable (rather than get/set class methods) to allow for easy localization.

BUGS

       Please report any bugs to <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Type-Tiny>.

SUPPORT

       IRC:     support     is     available     through    in    the    #moops    channel    on    irc.perl.org
       <http://www.irc.perl.org/channels.html>.

SEE ALSO

       Type::Tiny::Manual, Type::API.

       Type::Library, Type::Utils, Types::Standard, Type::Coercion.

       Type::Tiny::Class,    Type::Tiny::Role,    Type::Tiny::Duck,     Type::Tiny::Enum,     Type::Tiny::Union,
       Type::Tiny::Intersection.

       Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint, Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint.

       Type::Params.

AUTHOR

       Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.

THANKS

       Thanks to Matt S Trout for advice on Moo integration.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

       This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014 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.

perl v5.20.1                                       2014-10-25                                    Type::Tiny(3pm)