phpman > perldoc > Type::Utils(3pm)

Markdown | JSON | MCP    

NAME
    Type::Utils - utility functions to make defining and using type constraints a little easier

SYNOPSIS
       package Types::Mine;

       use Type::Library -base;
       use Type::Utils -all;

       BEGIN { extends "Types::Standard" };

       declare "AllCaps",
          as "Str",
          where { uc($_) eq $_ },
          inline_as { my $varname = $_[1]; "uc($varname) eq $varname" };

       coerce "AllCaps",
          from "Str", via { uc($_) };

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

DESCRIPTION
    This module provides utility functions to make defining and using type constraints a little
    easier.

  Type declaration functions
    Many of the following are similar to the similarly named functions described in
    Moose::Util::TypeConstraints.

    "declare $name, %options"
    "declare %options"
        Declare a named or anonymous type constraint. Use "as" and "where" to specify the parent
        type (if any) and (possibly) refine its definition.

           declare EvenInt, as Int, where { $_ % 2 == 0 };

           my $EvenInt = declare as Int, where { $_ % 2 == 0 };

        *NOTE:* If the caller package inherits from Type::Library then any non-anonymous types
        declared in the package will be automatically installed into the library.

        Hidden gem: if you're inheriting from a type constraint that includes some coercions, you
        can include "coercion => 1" in the %options hash to inherit the coercions.

    "subtype $name, %options"
    "subtype %options"
        Declare a named or anonymous type constraint which is descended from an existing type
        constraint. Use "as" and "where" to specify the parent type and refine its definition.

        Actually, you should use "declare" instead; this is just an alias.

        This function is not exported by default.

    "type $name, %options"
    "type %options"
        Declare a named or anonymous type constraint which is not descended from an existing type
        constraint. Use "where" to provide a coderef that constrains values.

        Actually, you should use "declare" instead; this is just an alias.

        This function is not exported by default.

    "as $parent"
        Used with "declare" to specify a parent type constraint:

           declare EvenInt, as Int, where { $_ % 2 == 0 };

    "where { BLOCK }"
        Used with "declare" to provide the constraint coderef:

           declare EvenInt, as Int, where { $_ % 2 == 0 };

        The coderef operates on $_, which is the value being tested.

    "message { BLOCK }"
        Generate a custom error message when a value fails validation.

           declare EvenInt,
              as Int,
              where { $_ % 2 == 0 },
              message {
                 Int->validate($_) or "$_ is not divisible by two";
              };

        Without a custom message, the messages generated by Type::Tiny are along the lines of *Value
        "33" did not pass type constraint "EvenInt"*, which is usually reasonable.

    "inline_as { BLOCK }"
        Generate a string of Perl code that can be used to inline the type check into other
        functions. If your type check is being used within a Moose or Moo constructor or accessor
        methods, or used by Type::Params, this can lead to significant performance improvements.

           declare EvenInt,
              as Int,
              where { $_ % 2 == 0 },
              inline_as {
                 my ($constraint, $varname) = @_;
                 my $perlcode =
                    $constraint->parent->inline_check($varname)
                    . "&& ($varname % 2 == 0)";
                 return $perlcode;
              };

           warn EvenInt->inline_check('$xxx');  # demonstration

        Your "inline_as" block can return a list, in which case these will be smushed together with
        "&&". The first item on the list may be undef, in which case the undef will be replaced by
        the inlined parent type constraint. (And will throw an exception if there is no parent.)

           declare EvenInt,
              as Int,
              where { $_ % 2 == 0 },
              inline_as {
                 return (undef, "($_ % 2 == 0)");
              };

    "class_type $name, { class => $package, %options }"
    "class_type { class => $package, %options }"
    "class_type $name"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Class type constraint.

        If $package is omitted, is assumed to be the same as $name. If $name contains "::" (which
        would be an invalid name as far as Type::Tiny is concerned), this will be removed.

        So for example, "class_type("Foo::Bar")" declares a Type::Tiny::Class type constraint named
        "FooBar" which constrains values to objects blessed into the "Foo::Bar" package.

    "role_type $name, { role => $package, %options }"
    "role_type { role => $package, %options }"
    "role_type $name"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Role type constraint.

        If $package is omitted, is assumed to be the same as $name. If $name contains "::" (which
        would be an invalid name as far as Type::Tiny is concerned), this will be removed.

    "duck_type $name, \@methods"
    "duck_type \@methods"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Duck type constraint.

    "union $name, \@constraints"
    "union \@constraints"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Union type constraint.

    "enum $name, \@values"
    "enum \@values"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Enum type constraint.

    "intersection $name, \@constraints"
    "intersection \@constraints"
        Shortcut for declaring a Type::Tiny::Intersection type constraint.

  Coercion declaration functions
    Many of the following are similar to the similarly named functions described in
    Moose::Util::TypeConstraints.

    "coerce $target, @coercions"
        Add coercions to the target type constraint. The list of coercions is a list of type
        constraint, conversion code pairs. Conversion code can be either a string of Perl code or a
        coderef; in either case the value to be converted is $_.

    "from $source"
        Sugar to specify a type constraint in a list of coercions:

           coerce EvenInt, from Int, via { $_ * 2 };  # As a coderef...
           coerce EvenInt, from Int, q { $_ * 2 };    # or as a string!

    "via { BLOCK }"
        Sugar to specify a coderef in a list of coercions.

    "declare_coercion $name, \%opts, $type1, $code1, ..."
    "declare_coercion \%opts, $type1, $code1, ..."
        Declares a coercion that is not explicitly attached to any type in the library. For example:

           declare_coercion "ArrayRefFromAny", from "Any", via { [$_] };

        This coercion will be exportable from the library as a Type::Coercion object, but the
        ArrayRef type exported by the library won't automatically use it.

        Coercions declared this way are immutable (frozen).

    "to_type $type"
        Used with "declare_coercion" to declare the target type constraint for a coercion, but still
        without explicitly attaching the coercion to the type constraint:

           declare_coercion "ArrayRefFromAny",
              to_type "ArrayRef",
              from "Any", via { [$_] };

        You should pretty much always use this when declaring an unattached coercion because it's
        exceedingly useful for a type coercion to know what it will coerce to - this allows it to
        skip coercion when no coercion is needed (e.g. avoiding coercing "[]" to "[ [] ]") and
        allows "assert_coerce" to work properly.

  Type library management
    "extends @libraries"
        Indicates that this type library extends other type libraries, importing their type
        constraints.

        Should usually be executed in a "BEGIN" block.

        This is not exported by default because it's not fun to export it to Moo, Moose or Mouse
        classes! "use Type::Utils -all" can be used to import it into your type library.

  Other
    "match_on_type $value => ($type => \&action, ..., \&default?)"
        Something like a "switch"/"case" or "given"/"when" construct. Dispatches along different
        code paths depending on the type of the incoming value. Example blatantly stolen from the
        Moose documentation:

           sub to_json
           {
              my $value = shift;

              return match_on_type $value => (
                 HashRef() => sub {
                    my $hash = shift;
                    '{ '
                       . (
                       join ", " =>
                       map { '"' . $_ . '" : ' . to_json( $hash->{$_} ) }
                       sort keys %$hash
                    ) . ' }';
                 },
                 ArrayRef() => sub {
                    my $array = shift;
                    '[ '.( join ", " => map { to_json($_) } @$array ).' ]';
                 },
                 Num()   => q {$_},
                 Str()   => q { '"' . $_ . '"' },
                 Undef() => q {'null'},
                 => sub { die "$_ is not acceptable json type" },
              );
           }

        Note that unlike Moose, code can be specified as a string instead of a coderef. (e.g. for
        "Num", "Str" and "Undef" above.)

        For improved performance, try "compile_match_on_type".

        This function is not exported by default.

    "my $coderef = compile_match_on_type($type => \&action, ..., \&default?)"
        Compile a "match_on_type" block into a coderef. The following JSON converter is about two
        orders of magnitude faster than the previous example:

           sub to_json;
           *to_json = compile_match_on_type(
              HashRef() => sub {
                 my $hash = shift;
                 '{ '
                    . (
                    join ", " =>
                    map { '"' . $_ . '" : ' . to_json( $hash->{$_} ) }
                    sort keys %$hash
                 ) . ' }';
              },
              ArrayRef() => sub {
                 my $array = shift;
                 '[ '.( join ", " => map { to_json($_) } @$array ).' ]';
              },
              Num()   => q {$_},
              Str()   => q { '"' . $_ . '"' },
              Undef() => q {'null'},
              => sub { die "$_ is not acceptable json type" },
           );

        Remember to store the coderef somewhere fairly permanent so that you don't compile it over
        and over. "state" variables (in Perl >= 5.10) are good for this. (Same sort of idea as
        Type::Params.)

        This function is not exported by default.

    "my $coderef = classifier(@types)"
        Returns a coderef that can be used to classify values according to their type constraint.
        The coderef, when passed a value, returns a type constraint which the value satisfies.

           use feature qw( say );
           use Type::Utils qw( classifier );
           use Types::Standard qw( Int Num Str Any );

           my $classifier = classifier(Str, Int, Num, Any);

           say $classifier->( "42"  )->name;   # Int
           say $classifier->( "4.2" )->name;   # Num
           say $classifier->( []    )->name;   # Any

        Note that, for example, "42" satisfies Int, but it would satisfy the type constraints Num,
        Str, and Any as well. In this case, the classifier has picked the most specific type
        constraint that "42" satisfies.

        If no type constraint is satisfied by the value, then the classifier will return undef.

    "dwim_type($string, %options)"
        Given a string like "ArrayRef[Int|CodeRef]", turns it into a type constraint object,
        hopefully doing what you mean.

        It uses the syntax of Type::Parser. Firstly the Type::Registry for the caller package is
        consulted; if that doesn't have a match, Types::Standard is consulted for standard type
        constraint names.

        If none of the above yields a type constraint, and the caller class is a Moose-based class,
        then "dwim_type" attempts to look the type constraint up in the Moose type registry. If it's
        a Mouse-based class, then the Mouse type registry is used instead.

        If no type constraint can be found via these normal methods, several fallbacks are
        available:

        "lookup_via_moose"
            Lookup in Moose registry even if caller is non-Moose class.

        "lookup_via_mouse"
            Lookup in Mouse registry even if caller is non-Mouse class.

        "make_class_type"
            Create a new Type::Tiny::Class constraint.

        "make_role_type"
            Create a new Type::Tiny::Role constraint.

        You can alter which should be attempted, and in which order, by passing an option to
        "dwim_type":

           my $type = Type::Utils::dwim_type(
              "ArrayRef[Int]",
              fallback      => [ "lookup_via_mouse" , "make_role_type" ],
           );

        For historical reasons, by default the fallbacks attempted are:

           lookup_via_moose, lookup_via_mouse, make_class_type

        You may set "fallback" to an empty arrayref to avoid using any of these fallbacks.

        You can specify an alternative for the caller using the "for" option.

           my $type = dwim_type("ArrayRef", for => "Moose::Object");

        While it's probably better overall to use the proper Type::Registry interface for resolving
        type constraint strings, this function often does what you want.

        It should never die if it fails to find a type constraint (but may die if the type
        constraint string is syntactically malformed), preferring to return undef.

        This function is not exported by default.

    "is($type, $value)"
        Shortcut for "$type->check($value)" but also if $type is a string, will look it up via
        "dwim_type".

        This function is not exported by default. This function is not even exported by "use
        Type::Utils -all". You must request it explicitly.

          use Type::Utils "is";

        Beware using this in test scripts because it has the same name as a function exported by
        Test::More. Note that you can rename this function if "is" will cause conflicts:

           use Type::Utils "is" => { -as => "isntnt" };

    "assert($type, $value)"
        Like "is" but instead of returning a boolean, returns $value and dies if the value fails the
        type check.

        This function is not exported by default, but it is exported by "use Type::Utils -all".

    "english_list(\$conjunction, @items)"
        Joins the items with commas, placing a conjunction before the final item. The conjunction is
        optional, defaulting to "and".

           english_list(qw/foo bar baz/);       # "foo, bar, and baz"
           english_list(\"or", qw/quux quuux/); # "quux or quuux"

        This function is not exported by default.

EXPORT
    By default, all of the functions documented above are exported, except "subtype" and "type"
    (prefer "declare" instead), "extends", "dwim_type", "match_on_type"/"compile_match_on_type",
    "classifier", and "english_list".

    This module uses Exporter::Tiny; see the documentation of that module for tips and tricks
    importing from Type::Utils.

BUGS
    Please report any bugs to <https://github.com/tobyink/p5-type-tiny/issues>.

SEE ALSO
    Type::Tiny::Manual.

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

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

    Moose::Util::TypeConstraints, Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints.

AUTHOR
    Toby Inkster <tobyink AT cpan.org>.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
    This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017-2021 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.

Type::Utils(3pm)
NAME SYNOPSIS STATUS DESCRIPTION
Type declaration functions Coercion declaration functions Type library management Other
EXPORT BUGS SEE ALSO AUTHOR COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES

Generated by phpman v3.7.12 Author: Che Dong Under GNU General Public License
2026-06-13 14:43 @216.73.216.28
CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top