Following phaylon's answer to "How can I flexibly add data to Moose objects?", suppose I have the following Moose attribute:
has custom_fields => (
traits => [qw( Hash )],
isa => 'HashRef',
builder => '_build_custom_fields',
handles => {
custom_field => 'accessor',
has_custom_field => 'exists',
custom_fields => 'keys',
has_custom_fields => 'count',
delete_custom_field => 'delete',
},
);
sub _build_custom_fields { {} }
Now, suppose I'd like to croak if trying to read (but not write) to a non-existing custom field. I was suggested by phaylon to wrap custom_field
with an around modifier. I have experimented with around
modifiers following the various examples in Moose docs, but couldn't figure how to modify a handle (rather than just an object method开发者_如何学编程).
Alternatively, is there another way to implement this croak-if-try-to-read-nonexisting-key?
They're still just methods generated by Moose. You can just do:
around 'custom_field' => sub {
my $orig = shift;
my $self = shift;
my $field = shift;
confess "No $field" unless @_ or $self->has_custom_field($field);
$self->$orig($field, @_);
};
(croak
is not very useful in method modifiers at the moment. It will just point you at internal Moose code.)
In fact, you don't need to use around
for this. Using before
is simpler:
before 'custom_field' => sub {
my $self = shift;
my $field = shift;
confess "No $field" unless @_ or $self->has_custom_field($field);
};
精彩评论