package Class::C3::Componentised; =head1 NAME Class::C3::Componentised =head1 DESCRIPTION Load mix-ins or components to your C3-based class. =head1 SYNOPSIS package MyModule; use strict; use warnings; use base 'Class::C3::Componentised'; sub component_base_class { "MyModule::Component" } package main; MyModule->load_components( qw/Foo Bar/ ); # Will load MyModule::Component::Foo an MyModule::Component::Bar =head1 DESCRIPTION This will inject base classes to your module using the L method resolution order. Please note: these are not plugins that can take precedence over methods declared in MyModule. If you want something like that, consider L. =head1 METHODS =cut use strict; use warnings; use Class::C3; use Class::Inspector; use Carp; our $VERSION = 1.0001; =head2 load_components( @comps ) Loads the given components into the current module. If a module begins with a C<+> character, it is taken to be a fully qualified class name, otherwise C<< $class->component_base_class >> is prepended to it. Calling this will call C. =cut sub load_components { my $class = shift; my $base = $class->component_base_class; my @comp = map { /^\+(.*)$/ ? $1 : "${base}::$_" } grep { $_ !~ /^#/ } @_; $class->_load_components(@comp); } =head2 load_own_components( @comps ) Simialr to L, but assumes every class is C<"$class::$comp">. =cut sub load_own_components { my $class = shift; my @comp = map { "${class}::$_" } grep { $_ !~ /^#/ } @_; $class->_load_components(@comp); } sub _load_components { my ($class, @comp) = @_; foreach my $comp (@comp) { $class->ensure_class_loaded($comp); } $class->inject_base($class => @comp); Class::C3::reinitialize(); } =head2 load_optional_components As L, but will silently ignore any components that cannot be found. =cut sub load_optional_components { my $class = shift; my $base = $class->component_base_class; my @comp = grep { $class->load_optional_class( $_ ) } map { /^\+(.*)$/ ? $1 : "${base}::$_" } grep { $_ !~ /^#/ } @_; $class->_load_components( @comp ) if scalar @comp; } =head2 ensure_class_loaded Given a class name, tests to see if it is already loaded or otherwise defined. If it is not yet loaded, the package is require'd, and an exception is thrown if the class is still not loaded. BUG: For some reason, packages with syntax errors are added to %INC on require =cut # # TODO: handle ->has_many('rel', 'Class'...) instead of # ->has_many('rel', 'Some::Schema::Class'...) # sub ensure_class_loaded { my ($class, $f_class) = @_; croak "Invalid class name $f_class" if ($f_class=~m/(?:\b:\b|\:{3,})/); return if Class::Inspector->loaded($f_class); eval "require $f_class"; # require needs a bareword or filename if ($@) { if ($class->can('throw_exception')) { $class->throw_exception($@); } else { croak $@; } } } =head2 ensure_class_found Returns true if the specified class is installed or already loaded, false otherwise =cut sub ensure_class_found { my ($class, $f_class) = @_; return Class::Inspector->loaded($f_class) || Class::Inspector->installed($f_class); } # Returns a true value if the specified class is installed and loaded # successfully, throws an exception if the class is found but not loaded # successfully, and false if the class is not installed sub _load_optional_class { my ($class, $f_class) = @_; if ($class->ensure_class_found($f_class)) { $class->ensure_class_loaded($f_class); return 1; } else { return 0; } } =head2 inject_base Does the actual magic of adjusting @ISA on the target module. =cut sub inject_base { my ($class, $target, @to_inject) = @_; { no strict 'refs'; foreach my $to (reverse @to_inject) { unshift ( @{"${target}::ISA"}, $to ) unless ($target eq $to || $target->isa($to)); } } # Yes, this is hack. But it *does* work. Please don't submit tickets about # it on the basis of the comments in Class::C3, the author was on #dbix-class # while I was implementing this. eval "package $target; import Class::C3;" unless exists $Class::C3::MRO{$target}; } =head1 AUTHOR Matt S. Trout and the DBIx::Class team Pulled out into seperate module by Ash Berlin C<< >> =head1 LICENSE You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut 1;