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schematic

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schematic is a library for data specification, validation, and transformation.

schematic works by constructing schematics that specify your data and can then unify to them from external data and dump your internal data back to the external data.

There are 12 builtin schematics that you can use to build new schematics that fit your own domain model.

  • bool/0
  • str/0
  • atom/0
  • int/0
  • float/0
  • list/1
  • tuple/1
  • map/1
  • schema/2
  • raw/2
  • any/0
  • all/1
  • oneof/1

Literals can be used as schematics and are unified with == semantics.

Struct literals can be used as schematics, and the input is unified by seeing if it is an instance of the given struct.

Example

Let's take a look at an example schematic for a JSON-RPC request for a bookstore API.

defmodule Bookstore do
  defmodule Datetime do
    import Schematic

    def schematic() do
      raw(
        fn
          i, :to -> is_binary(i) and match?({:ok, _, _}, DateTime.from_iso8601(i))
          i, :from -> match?(%DateTime{}, i)
        end,
        transform: fn
          i, :to ->
            {:ok, dt, _} = DateTime.from_iso8601(i)
            dt

          i, :from ->
            DateTime.to_iso8601(i)
        end
      )
    end
  end

  defmodule Author do
    import Schematic

    defstruct [:name]

    def schematic() do
      schema(__MODULE__, %{
        name: str()
      })
    end
  end

  defmodule Book do
    import Schematic

    defstruct [:title, :authors, :publication_date]

    def schematic() do
      schema(__MODULE__, %{
        {"publicationDate", :publication_date} => Bookstore.Datetime.schematic(),
        title: str(),
        authors: list(Bookstore.Author.schematic())
      })
    end
  end

  defmodule BooksListResult do
    import Schematic

    defstruct [:books]

    def schematic() do
      schema(__MODULE__, %{
        books: list(Bookstore.Book.schematic())
      })
    end
  end

  defmodule BooksListParams do
    import Schematic

    defstruct [:query, :order]

    def schematic() do
      schema(__MODULE__, %{
        query:
          nullable(
            map(%{
              {"field", :field} =>
                oneof(["title", "authors", "publication_date"]),
              {"value", :value} => str()
            })
          ),
        order: nullable(oneof(["asc", "desc"]))
      })
    end
  end

  defmodule BooksList do
    import Schematic

    defstruct [:id, :method, :params]

    def schematic() do
      schema(__MODULE__, %{
        id: int(),
        method: "books/list",
        params: Bookstore.BooksListParams.schematic()
      })
    end
  end
end

Reading external data into your data model.

iex> alias SchematicTest.Bookstore
iex> import Schematic
iex> unify(Bookstore.BooksList.schematic(), %{
...>   "id" => 99,
...>   "method" => "books/list",
...>   "params" => %{
...>     "query" => %{
...>       "field" => "authors",
...>       "value" => "Michael Crichton"
...>     },
...>     "order" => "desc"
...>   }
...> })
{:ok,
 %Bookstore.BooksList{
   id: 99,
   method: "books/list",
   params: %Bookstore.BooksListParams{
     query: %{field: "authors", value: "Michael Crichton"},
     order: "desc"
   }
 }}

Dumping your internal data model.

iex> alias SchematicTest.Bookstore
iex> import Schematic
iex> dump(Bookstore.BooksListResult.schematic(), %Bookstore.BooksListResult{
...>   books: [
...>     %Bookstore.Book{
...>       title: "Jurassic Park",
...>       authors: [%Bookstore.Author{name: "Michael Crichton"}],
...>       publication_date: ~U[1990-11-20 00:00:00.000000Z]
...>     },
...>     %Bookstore.Book{
...>       title: "The Lost World",
...>       authors: [%Bookstore.Author{name: "Michael Crichton"}],
...>       publication_date: ~U[1995-09-08 00:00:00.000000Z]
...>     }
...>   ]
...> })
{:ok,
%{
  "books" => [
    %{
      "authors" => [%{"name" => "Michael Crichton"}],
      "publicationDate" => "1990-11-20T00:00:00.000000Z",
      "title" => "Jurassic Park"
    },
    %{
      "authors" => [%{"name" => "Michael Crichton"}],
      "publicationDate" => "1995-09-08T00:00:00.000000Z",
      "title" => "The Lost World"
    }
  ]
}}

Telemetry

schematic fires the following events:

  • [:schematic, :unify, :start] - Fired when unification starts.
  • [:schematic, :unify, :stop] - Fired when unification stops.
  • [:schematic, :unify, :exception] - Fired when unification raises an exception.

Installation

def deps do
  [
    {:schematic, "~> 0.1"}
  ]
end

Documentation can be generated with ExDoc and published on HexDocs. Once published, the docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/schematic.

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright Β© 2023 Mitchell A. Hanberg

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the β€œSoftware”), 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 β€œAS 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.