Why not adopt me?
NAME
Class::DBI::Loader::Relationship - Easier relationship specification in CDBI::L
SYNOPSIS
use Class::DBI::Loader::Relationship;
my $loader = Class::DBI::Loader->new( dsn => "mysql:beerdb",
namespace => "BeerDB");
Now instead of saying
BeerDB::Brewery->has_many(beers => "BeerDB::Beer");
BeerDB::Beer->has_a(brewery => "BeerDB::Brewery");
BeerDB::Handpump->has_a(beer => "BeerDB::Beer");
BeerDB::Handpump->has_a(pub => "BeerDB::Pub");
BeerDB::Pub->has_many(beers => [ BeerDB::Handpump => 'beer' ]);
BeerDB::Beer->has_many(pubs => [ BeerDB::Handpump => 'pub' ]);
Just say
$loader->relationship( "a brewery produces beers" );
$loader->relationship( "a pub has beers on handpumps" );
DESCRIPTION
This module acts as a mix-in, adding the relationship
method to Class::DBI::Loader
. Since Class::DBI::Loader
knows how to map between table names and class names, there ought to be no need to replicate the names.
In addition, it is common (but not universal) to want reverse relationships defined for has-many relationships, and for has-a relationships to be defined for the linkages surrounding a many-to-many table.
The aim of CDBIL::Relationship
is to simplify the declaration of common database relationships by providing both of these features.
The relationship
takes a string. It recognises table names (singular or plural, for convenience) and extracts them from the "sentence".
AUTHOR
Simon Cozens, simon@cpan.org