SYNOPSIS In lib/Your/Class.pm: package Your::Class; use Class::Build::Array::Glob; has foo => (is => 'rw'); has bar => (is => 'rw'); has baz => (is => 'rw', glob=>1); In code that uses your class, use your class as usual: use Your::Class; my $obj = Your::Class->new(foo => 1); $obj->bar(2); my $obj2 = Your::Class->new(foo=>11, bar=>12, baz=>[13, 14, 15]); $obj1 is now: bless([1, 2], "Your::Class"); $obj2 is now: bless([11, 12, 13, 14, 15], "Your::Class"); DESCRIPTION This module is a class builder for array-backed classes. With it you can declare your attributes using Moose-style has. Only these has predicates are currently supported: is (ro/rw), glob (bool). Array index will be determined by the order of declaration, so in the example in Synopsis, foo will be stored in element 0, bar in element 1. The predicate glob can be specified for the last attribute. It means the attribute has an array value that are put in the end of the object backend array's elements. So in the example in Synopsis, bazvalue's elements will occupy object backend array's elements 2 and subsequent. There can only be at most one attribute with glob set to true. After the globbing attribute, there can be no more arguments (so subclassing a class with a globbing attribute is not possible). Note that without globbing attribute, you can still store arrays or other complex data in your attributes. It's just that with a globbing attribute, you can keep a single flat array backend, so the overall number of arrays is minimized. An example of application: tree node objects, where the first attribute (array element) is the parent, then zero or more extra attributes, then the last attribute is a globbing one storing zero or more children. This is how Mojo::DOM stores its HTML tree node, for example. SEE ALSO Other class builders for array-backed objects: Class::XSAccessor::Array, Class::ArrayObjects, Object::ArrayType::New.