NAME
    Data::Transfigure - performs rule-based data transfigurations of
    arbitrary structures

SYNOPSIS
        use Data::Transfigure;

        my $d = Data::Transfigure->std();
        $d->add_transfigurators(qw(
          Data::Transfigure::Type::DateTime::Duration
          Data::Transfigure::HashKeys::CamelCase
        ), Data::Transfigure::Type->new(
          type    => 'Activity::Run'.
          handler => sub ($data) {
            {
              start    => $data->start_time, # DateTime
              time     => $data->time,       # DateTime::Duration
              distance => $data->distance,   # number
              pace     => $data->pace,       # DateTime::Duration
            }
          }
        ));

        my $list = [
          { user_id => 3, run  => Activity::Run->new(...) },
          { user_id => 4, ride => Activity::Ride->new(...) },
        ];

        $d->transfigure($list); # [
                              #   {
                              #     userID => 3
                              #     run    => {
                              #                 start    => "2023-05-15T074:11:14",
                              #                 time     => "PT30M5S",
                              #                 distance => "5",
                              #                 pace     => "PT9M30S",
                              #               }
                              #   },
                              #   {
                              #     userID => 4,
                              #     ride   => "Activity::Ride=HASH(0x2bbd7d16f640)",
                              #   },
                              # ]

DESCRIPTION
    "Data::Transfigure" allows you to write reusable rules
    ('transfigurators') to modify parts (or all) of a data structure. There
    are many possible applications of this, but it was primarily written to
    handle converting object graphs of ORM objects into a structure that
    could be converted to JSON and delivered as an API endpoint response.
    One of the challenges of such a system is being able to reuse code
    because many different controllers could need to convert the an object
    type to the same structure, but then other controllers might need to
    convert that same type to a different structure.

    A number of transfigurator roles and classes are included with this
    distribution:

    *   Data::Transfigure::Node the root role which all transfigurators must
        implement

    *   Data::Transfigure::Default a low priority transfigurator that only
        applies when no other transfigurators do

    *   Data::Transfigure::Default::ToString a transfigurator that
        stringifies any value that is not otherwise transfigured

    *   Data::Transfigure::Type a transfigurator that matches against one or
        more data types

    *   Data::Transfigure::Type::DateTime transfigures DateTime objects to
        ISO8601 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601> format.

    *   Data::Transfigure::Type::DateTime::Duration transfigures
        DateTime::Duration objects to ISO8601
        <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Durations> (duration!)
        format

    *   Data::Transfigure::Type::DBIx transfigures DBIx::Class::Row
        instances into hashrefs of colname->value pairs. Does not recurse
        across relationships

    *   Data::Transfigure::Type::DBIx::Recursive transfigures
        DBIx::Class::Row instances into hashrefs of colname->value pairs,
        recursing down to_one-type relationships

    *   Data::Transfigure::Value a transfigurator that matches against data
        values (exactly, by regex, or by coderef callback)

    *   Data::Transfigure::Position a compound transfigurator that specifies
        one or more locations within the data structure to apply to, in
        addition to whatever other criteria its transfigurator specifies

    *   Data::Transfigure::Tree a transfigurator that is applied to the
        entire data structure after all node transfigurations have been
        completed

    *   Data::Transfigure::HashKeys::CamelCase a transfigurator that
        converts all hash keys in the data structure to lowerCamelCase

    *   Data::Transfigure::HashKeys::SnakeCase a transfigurator that
        converts all hash keys in the data structure to snake_case

    *   Data::Transfigure::HashKeys::CapitalizedIDSuffix a transfigurator
        that converts "Id" at the end of hash keys (as results from
        lowerCamelCase conversion) to "ID"

CONSTRUCTORS
  Data::Transfigure->new()
    Constructs a new default instance that pre-adds
    Data::Transfigure::Default::ToString to stringify values that are not
    otherwise transfigured by user-provided transfigurators. Preserves (does
    not transfigure to empty string) undefined values.

  Data::Transfigure->bare()
    Returns a "bare-bones" instance that has no builtin data
    transfigurators.

  Data::Transfigure->dbix()
    Adds Data::Transfigure::DBIx::Recursive to to handle "DBIx::Class"
    result rows

METHODS
  add_transfigurators( @list )
    Registers one or more data transfigurators with the "Data::Transfigure"
    instance.

        $t->add_transfigurators(Data::Transfigure::Type->new(
          type    => 'DateTime',
          handler => sub ($data) {
            $data->strftime('%F')
          }
        ));

    Each element of @list must implement the Data::Transfigure::Node role,
    though these can either be strings containing class names or object
    instances.

    "Data::Transfigure" will automatically load class names passed in this
    list and construct an object instance from that class. This will fail if
    the class's "new" constructor does not exist or has required parameters.

        $t->add_transfigurators(qw(Data::Transfigure::Type::DateTime Data::Transfigure::Type::DBIx));

    ArrayRefs passed in this list will be expanded and their contents will
    be treated the same as any item passed directly to this method.

        my $default = Data::Transfigure::Type::Default->new(
          handler => sub ($data) {
            "[$data]"
          }
        );
        my $bundle = [q(Data::Transfigure::Type::DateTime), $default];
        $t->add_transfigurators($bundle);

    When transfiguring data, only one transfigurator will be applied to each
    data element, prioritizing the most-specific types of matches. Among
    transfigurators that have equal match types, those added later have
    priority over those added earlier.

  add_transfigurator_at( $position => $transfigurator )
    "add_transfigurator_at" is a convenience method for creating and adding
    a positional transfigurator (one that applies to a specific data-path
    within the given structure) in a single step.

    See Data::Transfigure::Position for more on positional transfigurators.

  transfigure( $data )
    Transfigures the data according to the transfigurators added to the
    instance and returns it. The data structure passed to the method is
    unmodified.

AUTHOR
    Mark Tyrrell "<mark@tyrrminal.dev>"

LICENSE
    Copyright (c) 2023 Mark Tyrrell

    Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
    copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
    "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
    without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
    distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
    permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
    the following conditions:

    The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
    in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

    THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
    OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
    MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
    IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
    CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
    TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
    SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.