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NAME

MooseX::Observer - Simple Moose-Roles to implement the Observer Pattern

VERSION

version 0.010

SYNOPSIS

    ############################################################################
    package Counter;

    use Moose;

    has count => (
        traits  => ['Counter'],
        is      => 'rw',
        isa     => 'Int',
        default => 0,
        handles => {
            inc_counter => 'inc',
            dec_counter => 'dec',
        },
    );

    # apply the observable-role and
    # provide methodnames, after which the observers are notified of changes
    with 'MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable' => { notify_after => [qw~
        count
        inc_counter
        dec_counter
        reset_counter
    ~] };

    sub reset_counter { shift->count(0) }

    sub _utility_method { ... }

    ############################################################################
    package Display;

    use Moose;

    # apply the oberserver-role, tagging the class as observer and ...
    with 'MooseX::Observer::Role::Observer';

    # ... require an update-method to be implemented
    # this is called after the observed subject calls an observed method
    sub update {
        my ( $self, $subject, $args, $eventname ) = @_;
        print $subject->count;
    }

    ############################################################################
    package main;

    my $counter = Counter->new();
    # add an observer of type "Display" to our observable counter
    $counter->add_observer( Display->new() );

    # increments the counter to 1, afterwards its observers are notified of changes
    # Display is notified of a change, its update-method is called 
    $counter->inc_counter;  # Display prints 1
    $counter->dec_counter;  # Display prints 0

DESCRIPTION

This is a distribution, that provides roles, that implement the observer pattern.

MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable is a parameterized role, that is applied to your observed class. Usually when applying the MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable role, you provide a list of methodnames. After method modifiers are installed for these methods. They call the _notify-method, which in turn calls the update-method of all observers.

MooseX::Observer::Role::Observer is a simple role, that you have to apply to your oberservers. It simply requires you to implement a method called update. This method is called everytime the observed object changes.

The observers update-method receives an instance of the observed subject, an arrayref of arguments and an eventname, which is simply the name of the method, that triggered the notification.

ATTRIBUTES

Since Moose-Attributes can create accessors, which are methods, that can be applied method modifiers to, you can include attributenames in the list of observed methods.

In the synopsis, 'count' is an attribute, that is included in the list of observed methods.

MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable is then smart enough to notify observers only in case of a setter-call to an attribute.

    $counter->count(5); # setter-call will notify all observers
    $counter->count();  # getter-call won't notify any observer of changes

But it is not smart enough to detect changes to the value itself. A simple "$before ne $after" might not always work. Or would it?

    $counter->count(5); # setter-call will notify all observers...
    $counter->count(5); # ... again, although value was not changed

MANUAL NOTIFICATION

When applying the MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable role, you provide a list of methodnames. After method modifiers are installed for these methods, that call the _notify-method, which in turn notifies all observers of changes.

For Example, the after method modifier for count would look like this:

    after count => sub {
        my $self = shift;
        $self->_notify(\@_, 'count') if (@_);
    };

But you can also call the _notify-method yourself. Its arguments are passed to the update-method of the observers. You don't need to supply arguments, but because your observed subject should not need to know anything about the oberservers implementations, you should provide the following arguments:

1. an arrayref containg arguments

The standard behaviour is to pass all arguments of the observed method.

    $self->count(5); # [5] will be passed to _notify

You should pass at least an emtpty array to _notify.

2. an eventname

The standard behaviour is to pass the name of the observed method.

    $self->count(5); # 'count' will be passed to _notify

Feel free to supply a custom eventname here. If you don't rely on eventnames in your observers, you can ommit this argument. But MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable will always pass the observed methods name as eventname.

CAVEATS

The same rules apply as for normal roles. Because the attribute definition happens at runtime, the role consumption has to happen after the attribute. See "Required-Attributes" in Moose::Manual::Roles for more details.

In the SYNOPSIS the MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable role is applied after the count attribute, because the methodlist given to the role refers to inc_counter, dec_counter and the count attribute itself.

INSPIRATION

Moose testcase called "collection_with_roles.t" already implemented an observer role. In fact MooseX::Observer::Role::Observable is largely similar to the role used in the testcase. I just added passing parameters to the observers update method and the posibility to remove observers.

INSTALLATION

See perlmodinstall for information and options on installing Perl modules.

AUTHOR

Thomas Müller <tmueller@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Thomas Müller.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

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