EctoEnum is an Ecto extension to support enums in your Ecto models.
First, we add ecto_enum to mix.exs:
def deps do
[{:ecto_enum, "~> 1.0"}]
endWe will then have to define our enum. We can do this in a separate file since defining an enum is just defining a module. We do it like:
# lib/my_app/ecto_enums.ex
import EctoEnum
defenum StatusEnum, registered: 0, active: 1, inactive: 2, archived: 3Once defined, EctoEnum can be used like any other Ecto.Type by passing it to a field
in your model's schema block. For example:
defmodule User do
use Ecto.Model
schema "users" do
field :status, StatusEnum
end
endIn the above example, the :status will behave like an enum and will allow you to
pass an integer, atom or string to it. This applies to saving the model,
invoking Ecto.Changeset.cast/4, or performing a query on the status field. Let's
do a few examples:
iex> user = Repo.insert!(%User{status: 0})
iex> Repo.get(User, user.id).status
:registered
iex> %{changes: changes} = cast(%User{}, %{"status" => "active"}, ~w(status), [])
iex> changes.status
:active
iex> from(u in User, where: u.status == ^:registered) |> Repo.all() |> length
1Passing a value that the custom Enum type does not recognize will result in an error.
The enum type StatusEnum will also have a reflection function for inspecting the
enum map in runtime.
iex> StatusEnum.__enum_map__()
[registered: 0, active: 1, inactive: 2, archived: 3]
iex> StatusEnum.__valid_values()
[0, 1, 2, 3, :registered, :active, :inactive, :archived, "active", "archived",
"inactive", "registered"]Enumerated Types in Postgres are now supported. To use Postgres's Enum Type with EctoEnum, use the defenum/3 macro
instead of defenum/2. We do it like:
# lib/my_app/ecto_enums.ex
import EctoEnum
defenum StatusEnum, :status, [:registered, :active, :inactive, :archived]The second argument is the name you want used for the new type you are creating in Postgres.
Note that defenum/3 expects a list of atoms(could be strings) instead of a keyword
list unlike in defenum/2. Another notable difference is that you can no longer
use integers in place of atoms or strings as values in your enum type. Given the
above code, this means that you can only pass the following values:
[:registered, :active, :inactive, :archived, "registered", "active", "inactive", "archived"]In your migrations, you can make use of helper functions like:
def up do
StatusEnum.create_type
create table(:users_pg) do
add :status, :status
end
end
def down do
StatusEnum.drop_type
drop_table(:users_pg)
endcreate_type/0 and drop_type/0 are automatically defined for you in
your custom Enum module.