I define a method inside a parametrized role that needs to create a new class at run time
using Moose::Meta::Class->create
and apply that exact parametrized role to it. I am also making a new method for that role using
$new_class->meta->add_method( some_name => sub {
my ($self) = @_;
...
})
inside the sub {...} I want to access a method of the consumer class and use it for somet开发者_如何学Ching, I have tried using $self->get_method
, it didn't work, how do I do this?
Please notice that the $self
inside the sub above is MooseX::Role::Parameterized::Meta::Role::Parameterizable
I also have another question, if I do this:
my $object = Moose::Meta::Class->create(
"some_type",
);
Why isn't $object
of type some_type and it's some ugly MooseX::Role::Parameterized::Meta::Role::Parameterizable
and how do I get to the object of type some_type?
To answer your second question, the reason is because Perl's OO doesn't allow you to add a method to just one instance of a class, so Moose has to fake it by creating a subclass with the extra method and reblessing the unique object into that subclass.
Note that, if you are doing things correctly and doing your introspection with isa
, has
, and/or does
rather than by trying to rely on the name of the object's blessed package, this doesn't matter. The object still isa
some_type, has
all of some_type's attributes, and does
all of some_type's roles even though it's now blessed into a package with an ugly auto-generated name.
It sounds like your underlying problem is nearly exactly what I described at this question: from within the role definition, you need to get at the class (and its meta-class) of the object or class the role is being applied to. This isn't possible from within normal roles, but it's possible through parameterized roles.
I'm not quite sure what you're trying to do here. Let's assume you have
my $new_class = Moose::Meta::Class->create('FooBar');
then $new_class
is the meta object for FooBar
. So, if you want to add a method to FooBar
you would say
$new_class->add_method(foo => sub { … });
which would basically be the same as
FooBar->meta->add_method(foo => sub { … });
You should also probably use find_meta()
from Moose::Util. This will return the correct meta object (if there is one) even if your class doesn't have a meta
method or it uses it for something else.
As said, I'm not sure this answers your question.
精彩评论