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FieldStruct

FieldStruct provides a lightweight approach to having typed structs in three flavors: Flexible, Strict and Mutable.

It is heavily based on ActiveModel and adds syntactic sugar to make the developer experience much more enjoyable.

Attributes

All structs can be defined with multiple attributes. Each attribute can:

  • Have a known type: :string, :integer, :float, :date, :time, :boolean, etc.
  • Have a new type like :array, :currency or a nested FieldStruct itself.
  • Be :required or :optional (default)
  • Have a :default value or proc.
  • Have a :format that it must follow.
  • Be one of many options (e.g. :enum)
  • Have Have any number of ActiveRecord-like validations.

You can use the required and optional aliases to attribute to skip using the :required and :optional argument.

Usage

FieldStruct::StrictValue

This class enforces validation on instantiation and provides values that cannot be mutated after creation.

class Friend < FieldStruct.strict
  required :name, :string
  optional :age, :integer
  optional :balance_owed, :currency, default: 0.0
  optional :gamer_level, :integer, enum: [1,2,3], default: -> { 1 }  
  optional :zip_code, :string, format: /\A[0-9]{5}?\z/  
end

# Minimal
john = Friend.new name: "John"
# => #<Friend name="John" balance_owed=0.0 gamer_level=1>

# Can't modify once created 
john.name = "Steven" 
# FrozenError: can't modify frozen Hash

# Coercing string amount
eric = Friend.new name: "John", balance_owed: '$4.50'
# => #<Friend name="John" balance_owed=4.5 gamer_level=1>

# Missing required fields - throws an exception
rosie = Friend.new age: 26
# => FieldStruct::BuildError: :name can't be blank

# Invalid gamer level - throws an exception
carl = Friend.new name: "Carl", gamer_level: 11
# => FieldStruct::BuildError: :gamer_level is not included in the list  

# Invalid zip code - throws an exception
melanie = Friend.new name: "Melanie", zip_code: '123'
# => FieldStruct::BuildError: :zip_code is invalid  

FieldStruct::FlexibleValue

This class does NOT enforce validation on instantiation and provides values that cannot be mutated after creation.

class Friend < FieldStruct.flexible
  required :name, :string
  optional :age, :integer
  optional :balance_owed, :currency, default: 0.0
  optional :gamer_level, :integer, enum: [1,2,3], default: -> { 1 }  
  optional :zip_code, :string, format: /\A[0-9]{5}?\z/  
end

# Minimal
john = Friend.new name: "John"
# => #<Friend name="John" balance_owed=0.0 gamer_level=1>
john.valid?
# => true

# Can't modify once created 
john.name = "Steven" 
# FrozenError: can't modify frozen Hash

# Missing required fields - not valid
rosie = Friend.new age: 26
# => #<Friend name=nil age=26 balance_owed=0.0 gamer_level=1 zip_code=nil>
rosie.valid?
# => false
rosie.errors.to_hash
# => {:name=>["can't be blank"]}
 # 
# Invalid gamer level - not valid
carl = Friend.new name: "Carl", gamer_level: 11
# => #<Friend name="Carl" balance_owed=0.0 gamer_level=11>  
carl.valid?
# => false
carl.errors.to_hash
# => {:gamer_level=>["is not included in the list"]}
 
# Invalid zip code - not valid
melanie = Friend.new name: "Melanie", zip_code: '123'
# => #<Friend name="Melanie" balance_owed=0.0 gamer_level=1 zip_code="123">
melanie.valid?
# => false
melanie.errors.to_hash
# => {:zip_code=>["is invalid"]}  

FieldStruct::Mutable

This class has all the same attribute options as FieldStruct::Value but it allows to instantiate invalid objects and modify the attributes after creation.

class User < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :username, :string
  required :password, :string
  required :team, :string, enum: %w{ A B C }
  optional :last_login_at, :time
end

# A first attempt 
john = User.new username: 'john@company.com'
# => #<User username="john@company.com">

# Is it valid? What errors do we have? 
[john.valid?, john.errors.to_hash]
# => => [false, {:password=>["can't be blank"], :team=>["can't be blank", "is not included in the list"]}]

# Let's fix the first error: missing password 
john.password = 'some1234'
# => "some1234"

# Is it valid now? What errors do we still have? 
[john.valid?, john.errors.to_hash]
# => [false, {:team=>["can't be blank", "is not included in the list"]}]

# Let's fix the team
john.team = 'X'
# => "X"

# Are we valid now? Do we still have errors?
[john.valid?, john.errors.to_hash]
# => [false, {:team=>["is not included in the list"]}]

# Let's fix the team for real now
john.team = 'B'
# => "B"

# Are we finally valid now? Do we still have errors?
[john.valid?, john.errors.to_hash]
# => [true, {}]

# The final, valid product
john
# => #<User username="john@company.com" password="some1234" team="B"> 

FieldStructs as Class Parents

You can user FieldStruct as parent classes:

class Person < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :first_name, :string
  required :last_name, :string
end

class Employee < Person
  required :title, :string
end

class Developer < Employee
  required :language, :string, enum: %w[Ruby Javascript Elixir]
end

person = Person.new first_name: 'John', last_name: 'Doe'
# => #<Person first_name="John" last_name="Doe">
 
employee = Employee.new first_name: 'John', last_name: 'Doe', title: 'Secretary'
# => #<Employee first_name="John" last_name="Doe" title="Secretary">

developer = Developer.new first_name: 'John', last_name: 'Doe', title: 'Developer', language: 'Ruby'
# #<Developer first_name="John" last_name="Doe" title="Developer" language="Ruby">

FieldStructs as Types

You can use your FieldStruct as a nested type definition:

class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :first_name, :string
  required :last_name, :string
  required :title, :string
end

class Team < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :name, :string
  optional :manager, Employee
end

manager = Employee.new first_name: 'Some', last_name: 'Leader', title: 'Manager'
# => #<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Leader" title="Manager">

team = Team.new name: 'Great Team', manager: manager 
# => #<Team name="Great Team" manager=#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Leader" title="Manager">>

# Or use just hashes to build the whole thing:
team = Team.new name: 'Great Team', manager: { first_name: 'Some', last_name: 'Leader', title: 'Manager' }
# => #<Team name="Great Team" manager=#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Leader" title="Manager">>

Array Type

You can have attributes that are collections of a single type:

class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :first_name, :string
  required :last_name, :string
  optional :title, :string
end

class Team < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :name, :string
  optional :manager, Employee
  required :members, :array, of: Employee
end

team = Team.new name: 'Great Team', 
  manager: { first_name: 'Some', last_name: 'Leader' },
  members: [
    { first_name: 'Some', last_name: 'Employee' }, 
    { first_name: 'Another', last_name: 'Employee' }
  ]  
# => #<Team name="Great Team" manager=#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Leader"> members=[#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Employee">, #<Employee first_name="Another" last_name="Employee">]> 

JSON Conversion

You can create structs from JSON and convert them back to JSON.

class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :first_name, :string
  required :last_name, :string
  optional :title, :string
end

class Team < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :name, :string
  optional :manager, Employee
  required :members, :array, of: Employee
end

class Company < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :legal_name, :string
  optional :development_team, Team
  optional :marketing_team, Team
end

json = %|
{
  "legal_name": "My Company",
  "development_team": {
    "name": "Dev Team",
    "manager": {
      "first_name": "Some",
      "last_name": "Dev",
      "title": "Dev Leader"
    },
    "members": [
      {
        "first_name": "Other",
        "last_name": "Dev",
        "title": "Dev"
      }
    ]
  },
  "marketing_team": {
    "name": "Marketing Team",
    "manager": {
      "first_name": "Some",
      "last_name": "Mark",
      "title": "Mark Leader"
    },
    "members": [
      {
        "first_name": "Another",
        "last_name": "Dev",
        "title": "Dev"
      }
    ]
  }
}
|

company = Company.from_json json
# => #<Company legal_name="My Company" development_team=#<Team name="Dev Team" manager=#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Dev" title="Dev Leader"> members=[#<Employee first_name="Other" last_name="Dev" title="Dev">]> marketing_team=#<Team name="Marketing Team" manager=#<Employee first_name="Some" last_name="Mark" title="Mark Leader"> members=[#<Employee first_name="Another" last_name="Dev" title="Dev">]>>

puts company.to_json
# {"legal_name":"My Company","development_team":{"name":"Dev Team","manager":{"first_name":"Some","last_name":"Dev","title":"Dev Leader"},"members":[{"first_name":"Other","last_name":"Dev","title":"Dev"}]},"marketing_team":{"name":"Marketing Team","manager":{"first_name":"Some","last_name":"Mark","title":"Mark Leader"},"members":[{"first_name":"Another","last_name":"Dev","title":"Dev"}]}}

Validations

You can add AR-style validations to your struct. We provide syntactic sugar to make it easy to use common validations in the attribute definition.

# We have syntactic sugar to turn this definition: 
class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  attribute :full_name, :string
  attribute :email, :string
  attribute :team, :string
  
  validates_presence_of :full_name
  validates_format_of :email, allow_nil: true, with: /\A[\w+\-.]+@[a-z\d\-]+(\.[a-z\d\-]+)*\.[a-z]+\z/i
  validates_inclusion_of :team, allow_nil: true, in: %w{ A B C }  
end

# Into this definition:
class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  required :full_name, :string
  optional :email, :string, format: /\A[\w+\-.]+@[a-z\d\-]+(\.[a-z\d\-]+)*\.[a-z]+\z/i 
  optional :team, :string, enum: %w{ A B C }
end

# But you can also add more validations too:
class Employee < FieldStruct.mutable
  validates_length_of :email, allow_nil: true, within: 12...120

  validates_each :full_name do |model, attr, value|
    model.errors.add(attr, 'must start with upper case') if value =~ /\A[a-z]/
  end

  validate :check_company_email
  def check_company_email
    return if email.nil?
    errors.add(:email, "has to be a company email") unless email.end_with?("@company.com")
  end
end

bad_employee = Employee.new full_name: 'some name', email: 'bad@xyz', team: 'D'
# => #<Employee full_name="some name" email="bad@xyz" team="D">
bad_employee.errors.to_hash
# => {
#   :email=>["is invalid", "is too short (minimum is 12 characters)", "has to be a company email"], 
#   :team=>["is not included in the list"], 
#   :full_name=>["must start with upper case"]
# } 

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'field_struct'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install field_struct

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/acima-credit/field_struct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.