Why not adopt me?
NAME
Defaults::Modern - Yet another approach to modernistic Perl
SYNOPSIS
use Defaults::Modern;
# Function::Parameters + List::Objects::WithUtils + types ->
fun to_immutable ( (ArrayRef | ArrayObj) $arr ) {
# blessed() and confess() are available (amongst others):
my $immutable = immarray( blessed $arr ? $arr->all : @$arr );
confess 'No items in array!' unless $immutable->has_any;
$immutable
}
package My::Foo {
use Defaults::Modern;
# define keyword for defining constants ->
define ARRAY_MAX = 10;
# Moo(se) with types ->
use Moo;
has myarray => (
is => 'ro',
isa => ArrayObj,
writer => '_set_myarray',
coerce => 1,
builder => sub { [] },
);
# Method with optional positional param and implicit $self ->
method slice_to_max (Int $max = -1) {
my $arr = $self->myarray;
$self->_set_myarray(
$arr->sliced( 0 .. $max >= 0 ? $max : ARRAY_MAX )
)
}
}
# Optionally autobox list-type refs via List::Objects::WithUtils ->
use Defaults::Modern 'autobox_lists';
my $obj = +{ foo => 'bar', baz => 'quux' }->inflate;
my $baz = $obj->baz;
# See DESCRIPTION for complete details on imported functionality.
DESCRIPTION
Yet another approach to writing Perl in a modern style.
. . . also saves me extensive typing ;-)
When you use Defaults::Modern
, you get:
strictures (version 2), which enables strict and makes most warnings fatal; additionally bareword::filehandles and indirect method calls are disallowed explicitly (not just in development environments)
The
v5.14
feature set (state
,say
,unicode_strings
,array_base
) -- except forswitch
, which is deprecated in newer perls (and Switch::Plain is provided anyway).experimental
warnings are also disabled onv5.18+
.carp, croak, and confess error reporting tools from Carp
blessed, reftype, and weaken utilities from Scalar::Util
All of the List::Objects::WithUtils object constructors (array, array_of, immarray, immarray_of, hash, hash_of, immhash, immhash_of)
fun and method keywords from Function::Parameters configured to accept Type::Tiny types (amongst other reasonably sane defaults including arity checks)
The full Types::Standard set and List::Objects::Types -- useful in combination with Function::Parameters (see the "SYNOPSIS" and Function::Parameters POD)
try and catch from Try::Tiny
The path object constructor from Path::Tiny and related types/coercions from Types::Path::Tiny
maybe and provided definedness-checking syntax sugar from PerlX::Maybe
A define keyword for defining constants based on PerlX::Define
The |M| match operator from match::simple
The sswitch and nswitch switch/case constructs from Switch::Plain
The qc, qcw, and qc_to code-interpolating keywords from Quote::Code (as of Defaults::Modern
v0.11.1
)true.pm so you can skip adding '1;' to all of your modules
If you import the tag autobox_lists
, ARRAY and HASH type references are autoboxed via List::Objects::WithUtils:
use Defaults::Modern 'autobox_lists';
my $itr = [ 1 .. 10 ]->natatime(2);
Moo version 2+ is depended upon in order to guarantee availability, but not automatically imported:
use Defaults::Modern;
use Moo;
use MooX::TypeTiny; # recommended for faster inline type checks
has foo => (
is => 'ro',
isa => ArrayObj,
coerce => 1,
default => sub { [] },
);
If you're building classes, you may want to look into namespace::clean / namespace::sweep or similar -- Defaults::Modern imports an awful lot of Stuff:
use Defaults::Modern;
use Moo;
use namespace::clean;
# ...
SEE ALSO
This package just glues together useful parts of CPAN, the most visible portions of which come from the following modules:
List::Objects::WithUtils and List::Objects::Types
AUTHOR
Jon Portnoy <avenj@cobaltirc.org>
Licensed under the same terms as Perl.
Inspired by Defaults::Mauke and Moops.
The code backing the define keyword is forked from TOBYINK's PerlX::Define to avoid the Moops dependency and is copyright Toby Inkster.