I have a class with an attribute set up as follows:
has _data => (
is => 'ro',
lazy => 1,
builder => '_load',
);
sub _load {
my $self = shift;
return retrieve $self->_file;
}
However I now want to call a method already defined on the class before returning the data.
In old-school Perl OO, I'd be doing something like this:
sub _load {
# Assuming laziness is implemented somewhere else.
my $self = shift;
$self->{_data} = retrieve $self->_file;
$self->refresh; # which does something with $self->{_data}
return $self->{_data};
}
But I can't figure out a 'clean' way to do this in Moose.
I've considered the following, but think they are quite ugly, and that there must be a better way of doing this.
- If I make
_data
read-write, I could potentially write the data to the accessor, call the method then return the value from the accessor for Moose to write back to the accessor. - If I turn it into a plain old method then I'd have to define another attribute, say
_raw_data
, store the data in there, modifyrefresh()
to use that attribute, and everything else uses_data()
. - Violate encapsulation and access the underlying
$self->{_data}
directly.
I tried an after '_load' => \&refresh;
, but that just created an endless loop.