NAME
    Hash::Objectify - Create objects from hashes on the fly

VERSION
    version 0.004

SYNOPSIS
      use Hash::Objectify;

      # turn a hash reference into an object with accessors

      $object = objectify { foo => 'bar', wibble => 'wobble' };
      print $object->foo;

      # objectify with a specific class name

      $object = objectify { foo => 'bar' }, "Foo::Response";
      print ref $object; # "Foo::Response"

DESCRIPTION
    Hash::Objectify turns a hash reference into a simple object with
    accessors for each of the keys.

    One application of this module could be to create lightweight response
    objects without the extra work of setting up an entire response class
    with the framework of your choice.

    Using Hash::Objectify is slower than accessing the keys of the hash
    directly, but does provide "typo protection" since a misspelled method
    is an error.

USAGE
  objectify
      $object = objectify $hashref
      $object = objectify $hashref, $classname;

      $object->$key;          # accessor
      $object->$key($value);  # mutator

    The "objectify" function copies the hash reference (shallow copy), and
    blesses it into the given classname. If no classname is given, a
    meaningless, generated package name is used instead. In either case, the
    object will inherit from the Hash::Objectified class, which generates
    accessors on demand for any key in the hash.

    As an optimization, a generated classname will be the same for any given
    "objectify" call if the keys of the input are the same. (This avoids
    excessive accessor generation.)

    The first time a method is called on the object, an accessor will be
    dynamically generated if the key exists. If the key does not exist, an
    exception is thrown. Note: deleting a key *after* calling it as an
    accessor will not cause subsequent calls to throw an exception; the
    accessor will merely return undef.

    Objectifying with a "real" classname that does anything other than
    inherit from Hash::Objectified may lead to surprising behaviors from
    method name conflict. You probably don't want to do that.

    Objectifying anything other than an unblessed hash reference is an
    error. This is true even for objects based on blessed hash references,
    since the correct semantics are not universally obvious. If you really
    want Hash::Objectify for access to the keys of a blessed hash, you
    should make an explicit, shallow copy:

      my $copy = objectify {%$object};

SUPPORT
  Bugs / Feature Requests
    Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at
    <https://github.com/dagolden/hash-objectify/issues>. You will be
    notified automatically of any progress on your issue.

  Source Code
    This is open source software. The code repository is available for
    public review and contribution under the terms of the license.

    <https://github.com/dagolden/hash-objectify>

      git clone https://github.com/dagolden/hash-objectify.git

AUTHOR
    David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is Copyright (c) 2012 by David Golden.

    This is free software, licensed under:

      The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004