NAME
    Class::MethodMaker - a module for creating generic methods

SYNOPSIS
    use Class::MethodMaker new_with_init => 'new', get_set => [ qw /foo bar
    baz / ];

DESCRIPTION
    This module solves the problem of having to write a bazillion get/set
    methods that are all the same. The argument to 'use' is a hash whose
    keys are the names of types of generic methods generated by MethodMaker
    and whose values tell method maker what methods to make. (More
    precisely, the keys are the names of MethodMaker methods (methods that
    write methods) and the values are the arguments to those methods.

SUPPORTED METHOD TYPES
  new

    Creates a basic constructor.

    Takes a single string or a reference to an array of strings as its
    argument. For each string creates a method of the form:

        sub <string> {
          my ($class, @args) = @_;
          my $self = {};
          bless $self, $class;
        }


  new_with_init

    Creates a basic constructor which calls a method named init after
    instatiating the object. The *init*() method should be defined in the
    class using MethodMaker.

    Takes a single string or a reference to an array of strings as its
    argument. For each string creates a method of the form listed below.

        sub <string> {
          my ($class, @args) = @_;
          my $self = {};
          bless $self, $class;
          $self->init(@args);
          $self;
        }


  new_hash_init

    Creates a basic constructor which accepts a hash of slot-name/value
    pairs with which to initialize the object. The slot-names are
    interpreted as the names of methods that can be called on the object
    after it is created and the values are the arguments to be passed to
    those methods.

    Takes a single string or a reference to an array of strings as its
    argument. For each string creates a method of the form listed below.
    Note that this method can be called on an existing objec, which allows
    it to be combined with new_with_init (see above) to provide some default
    values. (Basically, declare a new_with_init method, say 'new' and a
    new_hash_init method, for example, 'hash_init' and then in the init
    method, you can call modify or add to the %args hash and then call
    hash_init.)

        sub <string> {
          my ($class, %args) = @_;
          my $self = {};
          bless $self, $class;
          foreach (keys %args) {
            $self->$_($args{$_});
          }
          $self;
        }


  get_set

    Takes a single string or a reference to an array of strings as its
    argument. For each string, x creates two methods:

      sub x {
        my ($self, $new) = @_;
        defined $new and $self->{$name} = $new;
        $self->{$name};
      }

      sub clear_x
        my ($self) = @_;
        $self->{$name} = undef;
      }


    This is your basic get/set method, and can be used for slots containing
    any scalar value, including references to non-scalar data. Note,
    however, that MethodMaker has meta-methods that define more useful sets
    of methods for slots containing references to lists, hashes, and
    objects.

  get_concat

    Like get_set except sets don't clear out the original value, but instead
    concatenate the new value to the existing one. Thus these slots are only
    good for plain scalars. Also, like get_set, defines clear_foo method.

  fields

    Creates get/set methods like get_set but also defines a method which
    returns a list of the slots in the group.

      fields => {
                 group => 'group_name',
                 slots => [ qw / slot1 slot2 / ]
                }


    Takes a single hash-ref or a reference to an array of hash-refs as its
    argument. Each hash-ref should have have the keys group and slots. The
    group value is the name of the method which returns the list of slots
    and the slots value should be an acceptable argument for get_set.

  object

    Creates methods for accessing a slot that contains an object of a given
    class as well as methods to automatically pass method calls onto the
    object stored in that slot.

        object => [
                   'Foo' => 'phooey',
                   'Bar' => [ qw / bar1 bar2 bar3 / ],
                   'Baz' => {
                             slot => 'foo',
                             comp_mthds => [ qw / bar baz / ]
                            },
                  ];


    This is a hairy one. The main argument should be a reference to an
    array. The array should contain pairs of class => sub-argument pairs.
    The sub-argument's are further parsed thusly:

    If the sub-argument is a simple string or a reference to an array of
    strings (as is the case for Foo and Bar above), for each string a
    get/set method is created that can store an object of that class. (The
    get/set method, if called with a reference to an object of the given
    class as the first argument, stores it in the slot. If the slot isn't
    filled yet it creates an object by calling the given class's new method.
    Any arguments passed to the get/set method are passed on to new. In all
    cases the object now stored in the slot is returned.

    If the sub-argument is a ref to a hash (as with Baz, above) then the
    hash should have two keys: slot and comp_mthds. The value indexed by
    'slot' will be interpreted as the is in (a). The value or values (ref to
    an array if plural) indexed by 'comp_mthds' are the names of methods
    which should be "inherited" from the object stored in the slot. That is,
    using the example above, a method, foo, is created in the class that
    calls MethodMaker, which can get and set the value of a slot containing
    an object of class Baz. Class Baz in turn defines two methods, 'bar',
    and 'baz'. Two more methods are created in the class using MethodMaker,
    named 'bar' and 'baz' which result in a call to the 'bar' and 'baz'
    methods, through the Baz object stored in slot foo.

  boolean

      boolean => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Creates methods for setting, checking and clearing flags. All flags
    created with this meta-method are stored in a single vector for space
    efficiency. The argument to boolean should be a string or a reference to
    an array of strings. For each string x it defines several methods: x,
    set_x, and clear x. x returns the value of the x-flag. If called with an
    argument, it first sets the x-flag to the truth-value of the argument.
    set_x is equivalent to x(1) and clear_x is equivalent to x(0).

    Additionally, boolean defines three class method: *bits*, which returns
    the vector containing all of the bit fields (remember however that a
    vector containing all 0 bits is still true), *boolean_fields*, which
    returns a list of all the flags by name, and *bit_dump*, which returns a
    hash of the flag-name/flag-value pairs.

  listed_attrib

      listed_attrib => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Like *boolean*, *listed_attrib* creates x, set_x, and clear_x methods.
    However, it also defines a class method x_objects which returns a list
    of the objects which presently have the x-flag set to true. N.B.
    listed_attrib does not use the same space efficient implementation as
    boolean, so boolean should be prefered unless the x_objects method is
    actually needed.

  key_attrib

      key_attrib => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Creates get/set methods like get/set but also maintains a hash in which
    each object is stored under the value of the field when the slot is set.
    If an object has a slot set to a value which another object is already
    set to the object currently set to that value has that slot set to undef
    and the new object will be put into the hash under that value. (I.e.
    only one object can have a given key. The method find_x is defined which
    if called with any arguments returns a list of the objects stored under
    those values in the hash. Called with no arguments, it returns a
    reference to the hash.

  key_with_create

      key_with_create => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Just like key_attrib except the find_x method is defined to call the new
    method to create an object if there is no object already stored under
    any of the keys you give as arguments.

  list

    Creates several methods for dealing with slots containing list data.
    Takes a string or a reference to an array of strings as its argument and
    for each string, x, creates the methods: x, push_x, and pop_x. The
    method x returns the list of values stored in the slot. In an array
    context it returns them as an array and in a scalar context as a
    reference to the array. If called with arguments, x will push them onto
    the list. push_x and pop_x do about what you would expect.

  hash

    Creates a group of methods for dealing with hash data stored in a slot.
    Takes a string or a reference to an array of strings and for each
    string, x, creates: x, x_keys, x_values, and x_tally. Called with no
    arguments x returns the hash stored in the slot, as a hash in an array
    context or as a refernce in a scalar context. Called with one argument
    it treats the argument as a key and returns the value stored under that
    key, or as a list of keys (if it is a reference to a list) and returns
    the list of values stored under those keys. Called with more than one
    argument, treats them as a series of key/value pairs and adds them to
    the hash. x_keys returns the keys of the hash, and x_values returns the
    list of values. x_tally takes a list of arguments and for each scalar in
    the list increments the value stored in the hash and returns a list of
    the current (after the increment) values.

  code

      code => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Creates a slot that holds a code reference. Takes a string or a
    reference to a list of string and for each string, x, creates a method x
    which if called with one argument which is a CODE reference, it installs
    that code in the slot. Otherwise it runs the code stored in the slot
    with whatever arguments (including none) were passed in.

  method

      method => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


    Just like code, except the code is called like a method, with $self as
    it's first argument. Basically, you're creating a method which can be
    different for each object. Which is sort of weird. But perhaps useful.

  interface

      interface => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]


ADDDING NEW METHOD TYPES
    MethodMaker is a class that can be inherited. A subclass can define new
    method types by writing a method that returns a hash of
    method_name/code-reference pairs.

    For example a simple sub-class that defines a method type
    upper_case_get_set might look like this:

      package Class::MethodMakerSubclass;

      use strict;
      use Class::MethodMaker;

      @Class::MethodMakerSubclass::ISA = qw ( Class::MethodMaker );

      sub upper_case_get_set {
        shift; # we don't need the class name
        my ($name) = @_;
        my %results;
        $results{$name} =
          sub {
            my ($self, $new) = @_;
            defined $new and $self->{$name} = uc $new;
            $self->{$name};
          };
        %results;
      }
      
      1;


VERSION
    Class::MethodMaker v0.9