Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
99 lines (74 loc) · 2 KB

DESIGN.md

File metadata and controls

99 lines (74 loc) · 2 KB

Design

We are heavily inspired by ActiveRecord, Eloquent and TypeORM.

  1. Intuitive and ergonomic

API should state the intention clearly. Provide syntax sugar for common things.

  1. Fast(er) compilation

Balance between compile-time checking and compilation speed.

  1. Avoid 'symbol soup'

Avoid macros with DSL, use derive macros where appropriate. Be friendly with IDE tools.

Test Time

After some bitterness we realized it is not possible to capture everything at compile time. But we don't want to encounter problems at run time either. The solution is to perform checking at 'test time' to uncover problems. These checks will be removed at production so there will be no run time penalty.

API style

Turbofish and inference

Consider the following method:

fn left_join<E>(self) -> Self
where
    E: EntityTrait,
{
    // ...
}

which has to be invoked like:

.left_join::<fruit::Entity>()

If we instead do:

fn left_join<E>(self, _: E) -> Self
where
    E: EntityTrait,
{
    // ...
}

then the Turbofish can be omitted:

.left_join(fruit::Entity)

provided that fruit::Entity is a unit struct.

Builder pattern

Instead of:

fn has_many(entity: Entity, from: Column, to: Column);

has_many(cake::Entity, cake::Column::Id, fruit::Column::CakeId)

we'd prefer having a builder and stating the params explicitly:

has_many(cake::Entity).from(cake::Column::Id).to(fruit::Column::CakeId)

Method overloading

Consider the following two methods, which accept the same parameter but in different forms:

fn method_with_model(m: Model) { ... }
fn method_with_active_model(a: ActiveModel) { ... }

We would define a trait

pub trait IntoActiveModel {
    fn into_active_model(self) -> ActiveModel;
}

Such that Model and ActiveModel both impl this trait.

In this way, we can overload the two methods:

pub fn method<A>(a: A)
where
    A: IntoActiveModel,
{
    let a: ActiveModel = a.into_active_model();
    ...
}