As Ben suggested, setting the attribute is working fine; but any read of the attribute sets it to undef. I added two lines to the end of Chris' test:
... say $at->dump; say $at->foo; say $at->dump; Now running it gives: perl test.pl $VAR1 = bless( { 'foo' => 'BAR' }, 'AroundTest' ); Use of uninitialized value $seq in uc at test.pl line 13. $VAR1 = bless( { 'foo' => '' }, 'AroundTest' ); Write-only attributes are generally not very useful. :-) John Macdonald Software Engineer Ontario Institute for Cancer Research MaRS Centre 661 University Avenue Suite 510 Toronto, Ontario Canada M5G 0A3 Tel: Email: john.macdon...@oicr.on.ca Toll-free: 1-866-678-6427 Twitter: @OICR_news www.oicr.on.ca<http://www.oicr.on.ca/> This message and any attachments may contain confidential and/or privileged information for the sole use of the intended recipient. Any review or distribution by anyone other than the person for whom it was originally intended is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please contact the sender and delete all copies. Opinions, conclusions or other information contained in this message may not be that of the organization. ________________________________ From: Chris Prather [perig...@prather.org] Sent: August 7, 2015 12:27 PM To: Marcos Barbeitos Cc: moose@perl.org Subject: Re: 'around' method modifier does not seem to work So you'll need to provide a reduced example that demonstrates the behavior your showing. When I tried to reproduce (with the script below) the attribute was being set just fine. #!/usr/bin/env perl use 5.12.1; use warnings; { package AroundTest; use Moose; has foo => ( is => 'rw' ); around foo => sub { my ( $next, $self, $seq ) = @_; $seq = uc($seq); $self->$next($seq); }; } my $at = AroundTest->new(); $at->foo('bar'); say $at->dump; On Thu, Aug 6, 2015 at 7:04 PM, Marcos Barbeitos <msbarbei...@gmail.com<mailto:msbarbei...@gmail.com>> wrote: Howdy, I looked up the behavior of the modifier 'around' in <http://search.cpan.org/~ether/Moose-2.1600/lib/Moose/Manual/MethodModifiers.pod#Around_modifiers>, and the code snipet is: around 'size' => sub { my $orig = shift; my $self = shift; return $self->$orig() unless @_; my $size = shift; $size = $size / 2 if $self->likes_small_things(); return $self->$orig($size); }; In my code, I have: has 'sequence' => ( is => 'rw' , isa => 'Str' , predicate => 'has_sequence' ); around 'sequence' => sub { my $orig = shift; my $self = shift; my $sequence = uc shift; # Do lots of things with $sequence and then return $self->$orig( $sequence ); } But the attribute is not set. I've tried lots of variations of the last line: $self->$orig( $sequence ); return $orig->( $self, $sequence ); $orig->( $self, $sequence ); return $sequence; With no success, as expected. However, if I do: around 'sequence' => sub { my $orig = shift; my $self = shift; return $self->$orig( @_ ); } The attribute is set and life goes on. Of course, that does not work for me because I need to do a bunch of things to the argument passed to this method. Any ideas about the reasons for the (apparent?) discrepancy in behavior? Best wishes and thanks in advance. -- Marcos S. Barbeitos Departamento de Zoologia - Sala 360 Setor de Ciências Biológicas Universidade Federal do Paraná Caixa Postal 19020 Curitiba, PR 81531-990 Brazil Phone: (55 41) 3361-1634