I've found that if a subclass adds a trigger, then method modifiers from the base class don't run. This seems like a Moose bug, or at least non-intuitive. Here's my example:
package Foo {
use Moose;
has 'foo' => (
is => 'rw',
isa => 'Str',
);
before 'foo' => sub {
warn "before foo";
};
};
package FooChild {
use Moose;
extends 'Foo';
has '+foo' => ( trigger => \&my_trigger, );
sub my_trigger {
warn 'this is my_trigger';
}
};
my $fc = FooChild->new();
$fc->foo(10);
If you run this example, only the "this is my_trigger" warn runs, and the "before" modifier is ignored. I'm using Perl 5.14.2 with Moose 2.0402.
Is this correct behavior? It doesn't seem right, especially since the trigger will fire after the before when the trigger is defined directly in the base class.