NAME

OP::Type - Type definitions for OP::Object subclass instances

DESCRIPTION

A Type describes the parameters which an OP::Object instance variable and/or database table column must conform to, and does so in a detailed and compact form. The OP::Type class also provides methods for strict runtime testing and enforcement of asserted values.

If a caller tries to do something contrary to a Type, OP will throw an exception, which causes an exit unless caught using eval/$@ or try/catch (see Error).

Dynamic Subclasses

The "built-in" subclasses derived from OP::Type and OP::Subtype are auto-generated, and have no physical modules.

Each concrete object class in OP provides access to its respective Type subclass, via the __assertClass() and __assert() class methods. For example, OP::Str provides access to the dynamic class OP::Type::Str; OP::Hash does so for OP::Type::Hash; etc.

Types may be modified by Subtypes (e.g. ::optional()). See OP::Subtype for more details and a list of these rule types. Subtype subclasses are allocated from the definitions found in the %OP::Type::RULES package variable.

SYNOPSIS

Typing rules for instance variables are asserted in class prototypes as inline keys:

use OP;

create "OP::Example" => {
  #
  # Instance variable "foo" will contain optional string data:
  #
  foo => OP::Str->assert(...),

  ...
};

More examples can be found in the OP::Class and OP::Subtype modules, and in the documentation for specific object classes.

The remainder of this doc contains information which is generally only useful if hacking on core OP internals.

TEST SUBS

These subs are defined as package constants, and are used internally by OP. These subs are not for general usage, but for coding OP internals.

Each returns a CODE block which may be used to validate data types.

When executed, the test subs throw an OP::AssertFailed exception on validation failure, and return true on success.

  • insist($value, Code $test);

    Runs the received value against a test sub.

    #
    # OP will agree, $str is string-like.
    #
    my $str = "Hello";
    
    insist($str, OP::Type::isStr);
    
    #
    # This will throw an exception:
    #
    my $notStr = { };
    
    insist($notStr, OP::Type::isStr);
  • isStr(Str $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for string-ness.

  • isFloat(Num $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for float-ness.

  • isInt(Num $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for int-ness.

  • isArray(Array $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for array-ness.

  • isBool(Bool $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for bool-ness.

  • isCode(Code $code)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for CODE-ness.

  • isHash(Hash $value)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for hash-ness.

  • isIO(IO $io)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for IO-ness.

  • isRef(Ref $ref)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for ref-ness.

  • isRule(Rule $rule)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for regex-ness.

  • isScalar(Str $scalar)

    Returns a CODE ref which tests the received value for scalar-ness.

PUBLIC CLASS METHODS

These methods are used internally by OP at a low level, and normally won't be accessed directly.

If creating a new Type subclass from scratch, its constructors and methods would need to implement this interface.

  • $class->new(%args)

    Instantiate a new OP::Type object.

    Consumed args are as follows:

    my $type = OP::Type::MyType->new(
      code       => ..., # CODE ref to test with
      allowed    => ..., # ARRAY ref of allowed vals
      default    => ..., # Literal default value
      columnType => ..., # Override column type string
      sqlValue   => ..., # Override SQL insert value
      unique     => ..., # true|false
      optional   => ..., # true|false
      serial     => ..., # true|false
      min        => ..., # min numeric value
      max        => ..., # max numeric value
      size       => ..., # fixed length or scalar size
      minSize    => ..., # min length or scalar size
      maxSize    => ..., # max length or scalar size
      regex      => ..., # optional regex which value must match
      memberType => ..., # Sub-assertion for arrays
      memberClass  => ..., # Name of inline or external class
      uom        => ..., # String label for human reference
      descript   => ..., # Human-readable description
      example    => ..., # An example value for human reference
      onDelete   => ..., # MySQL foreign constraint reference option
      onUpdate   => ..., # MySQL foreign constraint reference option
      
    );

READ-ONLY ATTRIBUTES

Although these are public-ish, there normally should not be a need to access them directly.

  • $type->allowed()

    Returns the array of allowed values for this asserted attribute.

    XXX TODO This would be much faster as a hash table keyed on value

  • $type->code()

    Returns the CODE ref used to test this attribute's value for correctness. The code ref is a sub{ } block which takes the value as an argument, and returns a true or false value.

  • $type->memberType()

    Used for Arrays only. Returns a "sub-assertion" (another OP::Type object) which is unrolled for array elements.

  • $type->memberClass()

    Used for OP::ExtID assertions only. Returns the name of the class which this attribute is a pointer to.

  • $type->externalClass()

    Convenience wrapper for memberClass, but also works for Arrays of ExtIDs. One-to-one foreign keys are asserted as ExtID, but one-to-many keys are an ExtID assertion wrapped in an Array assertion. This means a lot of double-checking in code later, so this method exists to handle both cases without fuss.

    Used for OP::ExtID assertions (one-to-one) and OP::Array assertions encapsulating an ExtID, to return the name of the class which the current attribute is a pointer to.

  • $type->objectClass()

    Returns the concrete object class which this type is for.

PUBLIC INSTANCE METHODS

  • $self->class()

    Object wrapper for Perl's built-in ref() function

  • $type->test($key, $value)

    Send the received value to the code reference returned by $type->code(). Warns and returns a false value on test failure, otherwise returns true.

    $key is included so the caller may know what the warning was for!

    XXX TODO The individual tests need moved out of this monolithic sub, and into the assertion code tests. Will make things cleaner and faster.

SEE ALSO

OP::Class, OP::Subtype

This file is part of OP.

REVISION

$Id: $