After creating a metaclass using Moose::Meta::Class->create, how do I instantiate a real Moose class with that class as a metaclass? (I need to create the metaclass also because I also want to apply some roles to it.)

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up vote 3 down vote accepted

The metaclass is the class, of course. If you want an instance of that class, just do:

my $instance = $meta->name->new

You might also need to make sure that $meta doesn't get collected too soon. Generally, you do this:

$meta->add_method( meta => sub { $meta } );

That will keep the metaclass around, but you're going to leak the class if you aren't careful. If you only do this once, it won't matter; if you do it thousands of times, you could get yourself into trouble.

Much better to use something higher-level like Moose::Meta::Class::create_anon_class or MooseX::Traits.

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ah yes thank you jrockway :) I didn't even know what $meta->name was supposed to do, that is HIGHLY , I repeat, HIGHLY unintuitive for a method name... oh well ... the world of software – xxxxxxx Mar 10 '10 at 14:49
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@xxxxxxxx - uh, name just returns the name of the package/class. How is that unintuitive? See search.cpan.org/dist/Class-MOP/lib/Class/MOP/Package.pm – daotoad Mar 10 '10 at 15:39
You could also use new_object on the metaclass. search.cpan.org/~flora/Class-MOP-1.12/lib/Class/MOP/… – ocharles Jan 18 '11 at 19:06
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Not sure this answers this or your other SO question How do I build a Moose class at runtime, add a method to it, apply a role to it and instantiate it once? How would you approach this? at Building a Moose class at runtime and tuning it but have a look at:

It may do what you want. Or you may find it useful to peer into our it works.

The documentation does provide links to blog posts I made while coming to grips with building this module so you may find those helpful also.

Here is an brief code example of MooseX::SingletonMethod:

{
    package Foo;
    use MooseX::SingletonMethod;
    sub bar { say 'bar' }
}

my $baz = Foo->new;
my $bar = Foo->new;

$baz->add_singleton_method( baz => sub { say 'baz' } );

$baz->bar;   # => bar
$bar->bar;   # => bar

$baz->baz;   # => baz
$bar->baz;   # Throws can't find baz error

/I3az/

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thank you draegtun :) – xxxxxxx Mar 10 '10 at 14:49
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