Skip to content

dsdshcym/objext

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

39 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Objext

Objext helps you define fully-encapsulated data structures (so called "objexts"). Then Objext allows you to define a common interfaces for these "objexts". Objext will dynamically dispatch the interfaces function calls to implementation functions (just like Protocol does). Finally, these data structures and interfaces defined by Objext are fully compatible with existing Protocols and Behaviours.

Installation

The package can be installed by adding objext to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

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

The docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/objext.

Goals

Objext is designed to help you define your Abstract Data Types, with an easy to use API. To achieve this objective, Objext keeps the following goals in mind:

  1. Encapsulated

    The data structure defined with use Objext should be 100% opaque to the other modules. I hope this feature can guide you to design data structures as Abstract Data Types (ADTs) in Elixir. ADTs are defined solely by what public functions can operate on them and what would happen/return when calling these functions. ADTs' internal structures are just implementation details and can be refactored in one place.

  2. Incremental

    With Objext, you can start designing your system from outside in. Solidify your public API at interface level first, then add implementation modules.

    You can also design your system from ground up. Incrementally refactor a normal Elixir module to an interface module plus an implementation module. And then add more implementation modules.

    See the Example section below for more details.

  3. Easy-to-test

    An ADT is not defined by its internal data structure but the behaviours of its public functions (terms). So we need to test if an implementation follows these terms. Objext lets you define reusable terms along side your interface module. Inside these terms, you can use your familiar ExUnit.Case.describe/2 and ExUnit.Case.test/3 macro to define tests. Then you can reuse these terms in each implementation module's test.

  4. Mockable

    Once you have an interface defined, you can use Objext.Mock to create mocks for this interface. So you can simplify your test for those code that depends on this interface.

  5. Compatible with existing tooling/ecosystem

    Elixir and Erlang ecosystem have already provided us many powerful tools. Elixir compiler emits warnings if you forget to implement a callback function. Dialyzer emits warnings if you peek into an opaque type. So Objext won't reinvent these wheels again. Instead, Objext will leverage these existing tools to provide the best developer experience.

    Plus, Objext allows you to define implementations for existing Protocols (e.g. Inspect) and Behaviours (e.g. Access). So you don't need to migrate from Protocol to Objext overnight.

Example

Inside-out approach

  1. At first, you may only have one Queue module. And you can just play with the public APIs until they are stable.
    defmodule Queue do
      def new(), do: []
    
      def enqueue(queue, item), do: queue ++ [item]
    
      def dequeue([]), do: {:empty, []}
      def dequeue([item | rest]), do: {item, rest}
    end
  2. When you feel the APIs are quite stable, you can converting it to an Objext module so it's now opaque to the other modules. The cost of this encapsulation is that you need to use the buildo macro to return a new objext (with the same "class"), and use the matcho macro to match the internal state of this "class" of objexts.
    defmodule Queue do
      use Objext
    
      def new(), do: buildo([])
    
      def enqueue(matcho(queue), item), do: buildo(queue ++ [item])
    
      def dequeue(matcho([]) = this), do: {:empty, this}
      def dequeue(matcho([item | rest])), do: {item, buildo(rest)}
    end
  3. Then you may need to introduce a new Queue implementation. You can define the interfaces and the implementations in the same Queue module. And all the existing (client) code should just work as expected.
    defmodule Queue do
      use Objext, implements: [Queue]
      use Objext.Interface
    
      definterfaces do
        def enqueue(queue, item)
    
        def dequeue(queue)
      end
    
      def new(), do: buildo([])
    
      def enqueue(matcho(queue), item), do: buildo(queue ++ [item])
    
      def dequeue(matcho([]) = this), do: {:empty, this}
      def dequeue(matcho([item | rest])), do: {item, buildo(rest)}
    end
  4. And then you can gradually extracting the old implementation to a separated module.
    defmodule Queue do
      use Objext.Interface
    
      definterfaces do
        def enqueue(queue, item)
    
        def dequeue(queue)
      end
    end
    
    defmodule ListQueue do
      use Objext, implements: [Queue]
    
      def new(), do: buildo([])
    
      def enqueue(matcho(queue), item), do: buildo(queue ++ [item])
    
      def dequeue(matcho([]) = this), do: {:empty, this}
      def dequeue(matcho([item | rest])), do: {item, buildo(rest)}
    end
  5. Meanwhile, you may reuse the existing test cases to define terms for the Queue interface. So any new Queue implementations can be assured to pass the same test suites.
    defmodule Queue do
      use Objext.Interface
    
      definterfaces do
        def enqueue(queue, item)
    
        def dequeue(queue)
      end
    
      defterms subjects: [:queue] do
        describe "enqueue |> dequeue" do
          test "first in first out" do
            q1 = queue() |> Queue.enqueue(1) |> Queue.enqueue(2)
            assert {1, q2} = Queue.dequeue(q1)
            assert {2, q3} = Queue.dequeue(q2)
            assert {:empty, ^q3} = Queue.dequeue(q3)
          end
        end
      end
    end
    
    defmodule ListQueueTest do
      use ExUnit.Case, async: true
      use Objext.Case, for: Queue, subjects: [queue: ListQueue.new()]
    end
  6. Finally, you can introduce a new module that implements the Queue interface:
    defmodule ErlQueue do
      use Objext, implements: [Queue]
    
      def new() do
        buildo(:queue.new())
      end
    
      def enqueue(matcho(state), item) do
        buildo(:queue.in(item, state))
      end
    
      def dequeue(matcho(state)) do
        case :queue.out(state) do
          {{:value, item}, new_state} ->
            {item, buildo(new_state)}
    
          {:empty, new_state} ->
            {:empty, buildo(new_state)}
        end
      end
    end
    
    defmodule ErlQueueTest do
      use ExUnit.Case, async: true
      use Objext.Case, for: Queue, subjects: [queue: ErlQueue.new()]
    end

TODO Outside-In Approach

Road-map

  1. Put Internal modules like *.Protocol and *.Object under Objext namespace (avoid polluting user namespaces)
  2. Boundary-like compile time check for encapsulation violations
  3. Eliminate the needs of delegating to protocols (simpler internal structure, better performance)

About

Build encapsulated data structures and shared interfaces in Elixir

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages