1
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I’ve tried something recently in a project with Dream.

Suppose you have an url like /page/param1/param2/ : you want to be able to do three things:

  1. Build this url in the application in a safe way, which mean : param1 -> param2 -> string
  2. Create a route which handle this url pattern (the compilation should fail if you don’t handle all the arguments)
  3. Ensure the handler will have the signature param1 -> param2 -> Dream.handler

Of course, some pages will have two arguments, some other three, and you have to find a way represent this in the type system.

For this, I’ve used a gadt:


type ('a, 'b) t =
  | Static : string * ('a, 'b) t -> (unit -> 'a, 'b) t
  | Int : string * ('a, 'b) t -> (int64 -> 'a, 'b) t
  | String : string * ('a, 'b) t -> (string -> 'a, 'b) t
  | End : ('a, 'a) t

The string is the parameter name in the url (id, login, …) and the gadt make the representation for this parameter in the type system. This gives me a way to declare some urls in the application:

val root : (unit -> 'a, 'a) t
(** The path to root / *)

val topic_url : (string -> 'a, 'a) t
(** The path to /:topic *)

val thread_url : (string -> int64 -> 'a, 'a) t
(** The path to /:topic/:thread *)

Then I have some some functions wihch handle this gadt:

val repr : (unit -> ('a, 'b) t) -> string
(** Represent the route associated with this path *)

val unzip : (unit -> ('a, 'b) t) -> (string -> string) -> 'a -> 'b
(** Extract the parameters from the request. 

    [unzip path extract f] will apply the function extract for all the
    arguments in the path, and gives them to f 

    The function [extract] is given in argument in order to break dependency
    circle.

    This should be something like: 

        let extract_param request name =
          Dream.param request name |> Dream.from_percent_encoded

*)
[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for your reply. I'm still not sure if I have managed to wrap my head around this 😕 I guess I need to re-read the relevant chapter from RWO book. I'll post back here I'm finally able to understand handler in your case.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

If you want something more detailed, there is a library which does the same things (with more documentation inside :)) : https://github.com/anuragsoni/routes

this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2023
1 points (66.7% liked)

OCaml

228 readers
5 users here now

An industrial-strength functional programming language with an emphasis on expressiveness and safety. Website: www.ocaml.org

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS