$obj = My::Class->new; # create base object
$bool = $obj->mk_accessors('foo'); # create accessors, etc...
- ### make all attempted access to non-existant accessors fatal
+ ### make all attempted access to non-existent accessors fatal
### (defaults to false)
$Object::Accessor::FATAL = 1;
If you want to be able to assign to your accessors as if they
were C<lvalue>s, you should create your object in the
-C<Object::Acccessor::Lvalue> namespace instead. See the section
+C<Object::Accessor::Lvalue> namespace instead. See the section
on C<LVALUE ACCESSORS> below.
=cut
=head2 $val = $self->___get( METHOD_NAME );
Method to directly access the value of the given accessor in the
-object. It circumvents all calls to allow checks, callbakcs, etc.
+object. It circumvents all calls to allow checks, callbacks, etc.
Use only if you C<Know What You Are Doing>! General usage for
this functionality would be in your own custom callbacks.
=head2 $bool = $self->___set( METHOD_NAME => VALUE );
Method to directly set the value of the given accessor in the
-object. It circumvents all calls to allow checks, callbakcs, etc.
+object. It circumvents all calls to allow checks, callbacks, etc.
Use only if you C<Know What You Are Doing>! General usage for
this functionality would be in your own custom callbacks.
=item * Allow handlers
Due to the nature of C<lvalue subs>, we never get access to the
-value you are assigning, so we can not check it againt your allow
+value you are assigning, so we can not check it against your allow
handler. Allow handlers are therefor unsupported under C<lvalue>
conditions.
=head2 $Object::Accessor::FATAL
-Set this variable to true to make all attempted access to non-existant
+Set this variable to true to make all attempted access to non-existent
accessors be fatal.
This defaults to C<false>.