/usr/share/perl5/Bread/Board/Manual.pod is in libbread-board-perl 0.29-1.
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# ABSTRACT: A manual for Bread::Board
__END__
=pod
=head1 NAME
Bread::Board::Manual - A manual for Bread::Board
=head1 VERSION
version 0.29
=head1 INTRODUCTION
As we have said, Bread::Board is an inversion of control
framework with a focus on dependency injection and lifecycle
management. The goal that Bread::Board strives towards is
to promote more decoupled designs. It does this by removing
the need for your objects to be concerned with resolving
and/or creating their dependencies as well as knowing (or
caring) what their lifecycle is.
=head2 Why should I use Bread::Board
First, it should be noted that Bread::Board and IoC are not
universally useful. Smaller applications and one-off scripts would
be overburdened by the abstractions of Bread::Board. But the larger
your application becomes, the more something like Bread::Board
can help.
As applications grow so the management of resources and their
dependencies becomes more of a burden. Making sure all your
components are properly initialized, in the right order and at all
times that you need them, can become a twisty maze. Bread::Board
is intended to help you manage this twisty maze and remove the need
for you to manage this manually.
Take your typical Catalyst application, the Catalyst framework
itself contains its own mini IoC framework through the
component subsystem. Catalyst will manage your models and views
making sure that they will be available when you need them in
the controllers. Catalyst makes all this easy to manage through
its configuration system. This is great inside your Catalyst
application, but what about outside of it? Any sufficiently
complex web application will have a set of scripts and/or
command-line applications to help support it. At this point
you are left to your own devices and must manage these
components and their dependency chains on your own.
By decoupling IoC into its own stand-alone subsystem it
becomes possible to get that same ease-of-use you get inside
something like a Catalyst application, outside of it.
This, in a nutshell, is what Bread::Board aims to provide.
=head1 SECTIONS
=over 4
=item L<Bread::Board::Manual::Concepts>
This is perhaps the best place to start, it will introduce you to
the basic concepts that make up Bread::Board.
=item L<Bread::Board::Manual::Concepts::Typemap>
With Bread::Board you provide names for your service so that you
can find them later. This document explores the new (read: experimental)
typemap feature which allows you to map services to types as well.
=item L<Bread::Board::Manual::Concepts::Advanced>
Bread::Board is an extensible and open system, this document will
explore how you can extend Bread::Board and get greater re-use of
your components.
=item L<Bread::Board::Manual::Example>
This is a set of examples meant to show how Bread::Board can be
used in real-world scenarios. It is recommended that you read the
above documentation first as many of these examples use the concepts
discussed in them.
=back
=head1 AUTHOR
Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Infinity Interactive.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
=cut
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