4

I frequently use Moose to make sure my data have suitable default values, like here:

package Bla;
use Moose;
has eins => is => 'ro', isa => 'Int';
has zwei => is => 'ro', isa => 'Int', default => 2;
no Moose; __PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable;

package main;
use v5.10;
use Data::Dumper;
use URI;

my $bla = Bla->new( eins => 77 );
my $bl2 = Bla->new;
print Dumper $bla, $bl2;
say join "\t", %$bla;
say join "\t", %$bl2;

my $u = URI->new( 'http://www.example.com/ws' );
$u->query_form( %$bla );
say $u;
$u->query_form( %$bl2 );
say $u;

As long as that kind of data container doesn't have any reference members (hence no nesting), would you say it is okay, or recommendable, to just use the object hashtable as in %$object if you want to get at the raw data, let's say as initializer for serialization via URI->query_form or similar methods? Or is there a better way to achieve this that's built into Moose?

UPDATE

Looks like I've been leading people on the wrong tracks by dropping the little word serialization in the lines above, and in the title, and even in the tags. Note that I'm not interested in finding serializers. In my example, the URI module is the serializer. The question is how to get at the data to feed URI->query_form (or any other serializer I might try). So what I want to know is whether for a given Moose object $object it is okay to grab the data (keys and values, or, if you prefer, property names and values) by just dereferencing the object reference, as in %$object? This will work, if my experience hitherto collected is anything to go by, as long as the objects don't contain any reference values (like array references, other objects, etc) and - the thing I'm not sure about - Moose won't use the instance reference to store data of its own, like __MOOSE_WHATNOT => $funky_moose_addon. So might Moose use the instance reference to store some of its own data, or is that precluded by design?

UPDATE 2

To answer the question in the title:

No, it's not okay to use %$object to get at the data of a Moose object, even if it doesn't contain any reference values so you'd get a copy of the strings and numbers that make up the $object. It's not okay because it breaks encapsulation. It might even result in a runtime error because although the hash is the default data structure to form the base of a Moose object, there is no guarantee that it will always be a hash, and it might in fact be something else.

You should use MooseX::Storage instead, which will provide the object with a pack method.

1

2 Answers 2

5

As jira has said the canonical way would be to use MooseX::Storage. The problem with %$object is that while the default storage for a Moose object instance is a blessed hash, Moose makes no formal promises that this is always the case. MooseX::GlobRef, MooseX::NonMoose, MooseX::InsideOut for example all allow for alterative instance structures.

A package like MooseX::Storage uses the MOP to interrogate the instance meta-object and serialize the data structure properly. You can of course do this by hand by crawling the Moose::Meta::Class that is behind every Moose object, but honestly MooseX::Storage is well written and very stable at this point.

The standard usage would be:

package Class {
     use Moose;
     use MooseX::Storage;
     with Storage();
     ...
}

my $o = Class->new(...)
my $u = URI->new( 'http://www.example.com/ws' );
$u->query_form( $o->pack );
3
  • Pefect, just the kind of info I was looking for, thanks! One more thing: Does make Moose any formal guarantees not to write data to $self, as in $self->{__MOOSE_SOMETHING__} = Moose::Antlers->new?
    – Lumi
    Jun 4, 2011 at 22:25
  • 1
    I'm not sure I understand the question entirely. However Moose makes no formal guarantees at all about the instance other than it will exist. Stevan has promised that the default instance type for Moose will be a blessed hash. This is because Moose at it's heart tries to be a codified and cleaned up version of "the way Perl OO has been done for a decade now". If you treat the instance like a data structure you wander into undefined behavior land. Resulting aviary simians and their chosen egresses are your problem.
    – perigrin
    Jun 8, 2011 at 22:18
  • Thanks, I've updated my question to reflect that information. It seems you did understand the question correctly. I didn't know about MooseX::Storage and was looking for a convenient way to get at the data for a number of my objects, which were basically, as I tried to say in my original question, simple data containers with default values and initializer checks. If I wanted to rely on %$object to do what I want, I'd probably have to derive a subclass and constrain it to guarantee that shortcut will indeed work as intended.
    – Lumi
    Jun 9, 2011 at 5:44
5

Moose "native" way would be to use MooseX::Storage set of classes.

3
  • Ah, no - sorry for leading you on the wrong tracks by talking about serialization, this is not strictly what I want to achieve, which is more clearly illustrated by the sample code I gave where I pass the object instance data to URI->query_form. It is well the Perl data that I'm interested in, not some JSON or XML or whatnot representation. Going to update my question to make it clearer.
    – Lumi
    Jun 4, 2011 at 20:21
  • Okay, MooseX::Storage looks useful, but it seems quite some overhead when all I want is the data from simple data containers. I realize, however, that %$object won't work for anything containing references, so anything nested.
    – Lumi
    Jun 4, 2011 at 21:51
  • MooseX::Storage provides a pack method that would return the Perl data structure properly.
    – perigrin
    Jun 4, 2011 at 21:53

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