On 2013.06.10 2:41 PM, Dave Rolsky wrote:
On Sat, 8 Jun 2013, Faelin McCaley Landy wrote:
The Moose::Manual is very well written, but is definitely lacking in
explanation of a very key step in product development: how on Earth do you
actually use your objects in a script?!
Specifically, my problem is that I want to have a main.pl from which I call
Obj->new( ... );
What I can't figure out is how I'm supposed to do this from a different file
than the original Obj definition. Currently, I'm making it work by
use Moose;
extends 'Obj';
How about "use Obj" ?
Moose classes are Perl packages no different from any other package.
Faelin's question almost strikes me as from someone who hasn't used objects at
all in Perl and found Moose first as "the" way to do it. Does perhaps the Moose
manual need a little more for people that don't know how objects in general work
in Perl, that is, actually spell out the "and then you use your new class like
this: use Obj; Obj->new()" etc. I mean, isn't one of the main points of Moose
to help beginners not have to think about the old way of doing objects when
they're starting out? So state what we may consider the obvious, as some Perl
beginners it may not be obvious to. -- Darren Duncan