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Usual

The nORM for everyday use

Usual is a simple wrapper for querying, and deserializing SQL queries in a (relatively) type safe way. Queries are still written in plain SQL, so you, the developer get all of the power (and responsibility) of not having a DSL.

Models

Usual revolves around models. Models let you query the data you want, and only the data you want. Simply add a derive for UsualModel.

use usual::{base::Model, base::TryGetRow, query, UsualModel};

derive(UsualModel)
struct Post {
    id: i64,
    title: String,
    content: String,
}

This gives you access to deserialize like a boss (this example uses tokio-postgres):

let _ = client
    .execute(
        query!("INSERT INTO posts (title, content) VALUES ($1, $2)").as_str(),
        &[
            &format!("title {}", Utc::now().timestamp_millis()),
            &"this is some content",
        ],
    )
    .await?;

let rows = client
    .query(query!("SELECT {Post} FROM posts").as_str(), &[])
    .await?
    .iter()
    .map(Post::from_row)
    .collect::<Vec<_>>();

The only special, usual-specific, language here is {Post}. This means "all of the fields in the Post model."

Partials

Often, you don't want to query every field on a table, we have that too with the partial macro.

let partial_rows = client
    .query(
        query!("SELECT {Post::title,created_at} FROM posts").as_str(),
        &[],
    )
    .await?
    .iter()
    .map(partial!(Post, title as String, created_at as Time))
    .collect::<Vec<_>>();

let post = partial_rows.get(0).unwrap();

// This is fine, because we grabbed the title row
println!("title: {}", post.title);

// This is a compile-time error, because we haven't fetched that row from the table.
println!("content: {}", post.content);

The syntax is simple, it's just ModelName::field,field,field.

Aliasing

Aliasing is supported via a query of the form:

query!("SELECT {TestModel::some_string as t} FROM test_model as t")

This query selects a field from the test_model table, which we've aliased as t in the query.

Multiple tables

Fetching from multiple tables is also possible, simply add more {}:

query!("SELECT {TestModel as t}, {TestModel2 as t2} FROM test_model as t JOIN test_model as t2 on t.id = t2.id")

This will let you do a single query and hydrate multiple types of objects from the resulting rows.

Including non-sql values

Including values not stored in SQL can be achieved by using the #[unusual] attribute. In order to be unusual, a field must implement Default, as when the struct is created this is what will be called for that field.

use usual::{base::Model, base::TryGetRow, query, UsualModel};

struct SomethingElse {}

derive(UsualModel)
struct Post {
    id: i64,
    title: String,
    content: String,
    #[unusual]
    non_sql: Option<SomethingElse>
}

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