NAME
    Object::Util - a selection of utility methods that can be called on
    blessed objects

SYNOPSIS
       use Object::Util;
   
       # $foo might be undef, but this should not die
       if ($foo->$_isa("Bar")) {
          ...;
       }

DESCRIPTION
    This module is inspired by Safe::Isa, Object::Tap, and my own OO
    experiences. It is a hopefully helpful set of methods for working with
    objects, exposed as lexical coderef variables.

  Rationale
    Providing methods as coderefs so that you can do:

       $object->$_foo(@args)

    ... is unusual, so probably requires some explanation.

    Firstly some of these methods are designed to be called on either a
    blessed object or some kind of unblessed reference or value. Calling a
    method on an unblessed reference like this will croak:

       $ref->foo(@args)

    Ditto calling methods on undef. Coderefs don't suffer from that problem.

    More importantly though, the aim of this module is that these methods
    should be available for you to call on *any* object. You can only call
    `$object->foo(@args)` if $object's class implements a method called `foo`,
    or inherits from a superclass that does. Coderef methods can be called on
    any object.

    This module adopts the $_foo naming convention pioneered by modules such
    as Safe::Isa. However (unlike Safe::Isa) the coderefs it provides are
    *true lexical variables* (a.k.a. `my` variables), not package variables
    (a.k.a. `our` variables).

  Methods
   Object construction and manipulation
    $_new
        Can be used like `$class->$_new(@args)` to create a new object.
        Object::Util will use Module::Runtime to *attempt* to load $class if
        it is not already loaded. $class is expected to provide a method
        called `new`.

        Can also be used as `$factory->$_new(@args)` to create a new object,
        where $factory is a coderef or an object overloading `&{}`. In this
        case, $_new will simply call `$factory->(@args)` and expect that to
        return an object.

    $_clone
        If the object provides a `clone` method, calls that. Or if the object
        appears to be Moose- or Mouse-based, clones it using the metaobject
        protocol.

        Otherwise takes the naive approach of treating the object as a hashref
        of attribute values, and creates a new object of the same class.

           # clone overrides some attributes from the original object
           my $glenda = $glen->$_clone(name => "Glenda", gender => "f");

        That final fallback obviously massively breaks your class'
        encapsulation, so it should be used sparingly.

    $_with_traits
        Calling `$class->$_with_traits(@traits)` will return a new class name
        that does some extra traits. Should roughly support Moose, Mouse, Moo,
        and Role::Tiny, though combinations of frameworks (e.g. consuming a
        Moose role in a Mouse class) will not always work.

        If $class is actually a (factory) coderef, then this will only
        *partly* work. Example:

           my $factory  = sub { Foo->new(@_) };
           my $instance = $factory->$_with_traits("Bar")->$_new(%args);

        The object $instance should now be a `Foo` object, and should do the
        `Bar` role, however if `Bar` defines any *attributes*, then $_new will
        not have initialized them correctly. This is because of the opacity of
        the $factory: $_with_traits cannot peek inside it and apply traits to
        the `Foo` class; instead it needs to build $instance and apply the
        traits to the already-built object. Therefore any behaviour that `Bar`
        defines for the constructor will have been ignored.

        It is sometimes possible to work around this issue using:

           my $factory  = sub { Foo->new(@_) };
           my $instance = $factory->$_with_traits("Bar")->$_new(%args);
           $instance = $instance->$_clone(%args);

    $_extend
        Calling `$object->$_extend(\@traits, \%methods)` will add some extra
        roles and/or methods to an existing object.

        Either @traits or %methods may be omitted. That is,
        `$object->$_extend(\@traits)` will add some traits to an existing
        object but no new methods, and `$object->$_extend(\%methods)` will add
        new methods, but no traits. `$object->$_extend()` also works fine, and
        is a no-op.

        This method always returns $object, which makes it suitable for
        chaining.

        Like Object::Extend, but with added support for roles.

    $_murder
        Called on an object, tries its best to destroy the object.

          my $object = Foo->new;
          $object->$_murder;
          defined($object);   # false

        Not only will $object be set to undef in the above example, but if
        there were any other references to the object, $_murder will do its
        best to poison them too.

        $_murder will empty out the contents of the underlying hash or array
        in hashref-based and arrayref-based objects, and for scalarref-based
        objects will set the underlying scalar to undef.

        $_murder will also rebless the reference into a dummy class where all
        method calls will croak.

        $_murder will generously ensure that the object's `DESTROY` is called
        before initiating the killing spree, allowing the class to perform any
        necessary clean-up first.

   Method call modifiers
    $_call_if_object
        `$object->$_call_if_object($method => @args)` works like
        `$object->$method(@args)`, but if $object is undefined, returns
        `undef` instead of throwing an exception.

        $method may be a method name, or a coderef (anonymous method).

        Same as Safe::Isa.

    $_try
        `$object->$_try($method => @args)` works like
        `$object->$method(@args)`, but if *any exception is thrown* returns
        `undef` instead.

        $method may be a method name, or a coderef (anonymous method).

    $_tap
        `$object->$_tap($method => @args)` works like
        `$object->$method(@args)`, but discards the method's return value
        (indeed it calls the method in void context), and instead returns the
        object itself, making it useful for chaining.

        $method may be a method name, or a coderef (anonymous method).

        Same as Object::Tap, or the `tap` method in Ruby.

    $_isa
        `$object->$_isa($class)` works like `isa` as defined in UNIVERSAL, but
        if $object is undefined, returns false instead of throwing an
        exception.

        A shortcut for `$object->$_call_if_object(isa => $class)`.

        Same as Safe::Isa.

    $_does
        `$object->$_does($role)` works like `does` as defined in
        Moose::Object, but if $object is undefined, returns false instead of
        throwing an exception.

        A shortcut for `$object->$_call_if_object(does => $role)`.

        Same as Safe::Isa.

    $_DOES
        `$object->$_DOES($role)` works like `DOES` as defined in UNIVERSAL,
        but if $object is undefined, returns false instead of throwing an
        exception.

        A shortcut for `$object->$_call_if_object(DOES => $role)`.

        Same as Safe::Isa.

    $_can
        `$object->$_can($method)` works like `can` as defined in UNIVERSAL,
        but if $object is undefined, returns `undef` instead of throwing an
        exception.

        There is one other significant deviation from the behaviour of
        UNIVERSAL's `can` method: $_can also returns true if $method is an
        unblessed coderef. (The behaviour of $method if it is a blessed object
        -- particularly in the face of overloading -- can be unintuitive, so
        is not supported by $_can.)

        Similar to Safe::Isa, but not quite the same.

   Object utility methods
    $_dump
        Calling `$object->$_dump` returns a Data::Dumper dump of the object,
        with some useful changes to the default Data::Dumper output. (Same as
        Data::Dumper::Concise.)

        If the object provides its own `dump` method, this will be called
        instead. Any additional arguments will be passed through to it.

    $_dwarn
        Calling `$object->$_dwarn(@args)` prints a similar dump of the object
        and any arguments as a warning, then returns the object, so is
        suitable for tap-like chaining.

        Unlike $_dump, will not call the object's own `dump` method.

    $_dwarn_call
        Calling `$object->$_dwarn_call($method, @args)` calls the method on
        the object, passing it the arguments, and returns the result. Along
        the way, it will dump the object, method, arguments, and return value
        as warnings. Returns the method's return value.

        Unlike $_dump, will not call the object's own `dump` method.

  Implementation Details
    B::Hooks::Parser is used to inject these methods into your lexical scope,
    and `Internals::SvREADONLY` (an internal function built into the Perl
    core) is used to make them read-only, so you can't do:

       use Object::Util;
       $_isa = sub { "something else" };

    If this module detects that B::Hooks::Parser cannot be used on your
    version of Perl, or your Perl is too old to have Internals::SvREADONLY,
    then it has various fallback routes, but the variables it provides may end
    up as package (`our`) variables, or not be read-only.

    If the magic works on your version of Perl, but you wish to avoid the
    magic anyway, you can switch it off:

       use Object::Util magic => 0;

    The magic may trigger bugs if you're loading Object::Util in a
    sufficiently unusual way (for example, `require` and `import` instead of
    `use`). If this happens, disable magic.

BUGS
    Please report any bugs to
    <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Object-Util>.

SEE ALSO
    Safe::Isa, UNIVERSAL, Object::Tap, MooseX::Clone, Data::Dumper::Concise,
    Object::Extend.

AUTHOR
    Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
    This software is copyright (c) 2014, 2018 by Toby Inkster.

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

DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
    THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
    WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
    MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.