This is a tiny library for parsing and generating paths and parameters of urls.
We represent the path and query parameters of a url as follows:
import urldsl.language.simpleErrorImpl._
import urldsl.vocabulary.{Segment, Param, UrlMatching}
val path = root / "hello" / segment[Int] / segment[String] / endOfSegments
val params = param[Int]("age") & listParam[String]("drinks")
val pathWithParams = path ? params
pathWithParams.matchRawUrl(
"http://localhost:8080/hello/2019/january?age=10&drinks=orange+juice&drinks=water"
) should be(
Right(UrlMatching((2019, "january"), (10, List("orange juice", "water"))))
)
path.matchPath("/hello/2019/january") should be(
Right((2019, "january"))
)
params.matchQueryString("age=22&drinks=orange+juice&drinks=water") should be(
Right((22, List("orange juice", "water")))
)
For more example usages, head over the tests, and in particular in the urldsl.examples
package..
Add the following to your build.sbt
(or wherever you add your dependencies):
libraryDependencies += "be.doeraene" %% "url-dsl" % "0.4.0"
or, for Scala.js,
libraryDependencies += "be.doeraene" %%% "url-dsl" % "0.4.0"
The highest abstraction that this library provide is the UrlPart. A UrlPart
represents a part of the URL and will be able to:
- when applied to a URL, tries to extract information from that URL
- when fed with information, generates a string that this piece of information represents.
The part that the UrlPart
represents can be:
- the path of the URL
- the query of the URL
- the fragment of the URL
- a combination of any of the above.
This is a trait with two type parameters, T
and E
. The type T
is the type of information represented in this UrlPart
. For example, if T =:= (String, Int)
, it means that we will get a pair when extracting information from a URL, and we will need to feed that when generating the string part of the URL.
Matching a URL can fail. When it does, it will produce an element of type E
. E
can be any ADT of your choosing, however url-dsl comes with two default implementations, one particularly suited for debugging, and the other when you don't care about what error was produced (but you only care to know whether the test was successful).
There are essentially three classes that are important for using urldsl
(plus two others when you combine them), all of them extending UrlPart
. These three classes are
- PathSegment: abstraction describinng the path part of the URL
- QueryParameters: abstraction describing the query (search) part of the URL
- Fragment: abstraction describing the fragment (ref) part of the URL
As said above, these classes come with two type parameters, one for the information, and one for the possible matching error. For example, in the case of the path, if T =:= (String, Int)
, the path contains the information about a String
and an Int
, as in the following segment
root / segment[String] / "foo" / segment[Int]
The path part of the URL is modelled by the urldsl.language.PathSegment[T, A]
trait. At its core, a PathSegment
is
merely an object with two methods matchRawUrl
and createPath
. The matchRawUrl
method takes as input the string
containing a URL (well formed!) and returns Either
an instance of T
(the information contained in the input URL)
or an error of type A
(if the segment could not retrieve the information).
PathSegment
s are immutable objects that can be composed together with the /
operator. This operator is associative
and creates, given two PathSegment
s with type parameters T
and U
, will create a PathSegment
with type parameter,
roughly, (T, U)
(with some additional rules described in the Composition
class that, without entering details, flattens
the tuples and removes Unit
s). So if T =:= (String, Int)
and U =:= (String, Double)
, you'll get the type
(String, Int, String, Double)
.
When a PathSegment
matches a URL, it internally receives the list of Segment
s, consumes one or several of them, and
passes the rest onto the following (when there are composed). For example, if you have a PathSegment
that matches the
string "foo", and an other that matches an Int
, if you give the composition "foo/22", the first PathSegment
consumes
"foo" and passes "22" to the next one, which will them consume it.
There are a bunch of PathSegment
s that are already defined, and should satisfy most of your basic needs. For example,
the following things are implemented (you can look at the companion object of PathSegment
to have the comprehensive
list:
root
: matches everything and passes all segments onto the nextsegment[T]
matches an element of typeT
, whose information is contained in only one segment, and passes the other segments onto the nextendOfSegments
: which matches only the empty list of segments, and thus passes nothing onto the next (there should never be a next, though)- the list goes on...
Comprehensive examples can be found in here. Below we give a quick overview.
The following examples assume the following import:
import urldsl.language.PathSegment.simplePathErrorImpl._
Here are a bunch of things that you can do with the paths:
(root / "home" / "about").matchRawUrl("http://localhost:8080/home/about") // success, returns Unit
(root / "home" / "about").matchRawUrl("http://localhost:8080/home") // failure, returns MissingSegment
(root / segment[String] / segment[Int]).matchRawUrl("http://www.google.be/user/22") // success, returns ("user", 22)
(root / segment[String] / segment[Int]).matchRawUrl("http://www.google.be/user/foo") // failure, returns SimpleError
(root / "home").matchRawUrl("http://scala-lang.org/about") // failure, returns WrongValue("home", "about")
case class User(id: Int, name: String)
object User {
implicit val userCodec: Codec[(Int, String), User] = new Codec[(Int, String), User] {
def leftToRight(left: (Int, String)): User = User(left._1, left._2)
def rightToLeft(right: User): (Int, String) = (right.id, right.name)
}
}
val userPath = (root / "user" / segment[Int] / segment[String]).as[User]
userPath.matchRawUrl("http://scala-lang.org/user/5/Alice") // success, returns User(5, "Alice")
userPath.createPath(User(5, "Alice")) // returns user/5/Alice
Note that starting with root
is not strictly necessary (technically, root
is the neutral of the /
operator) but
it allows to use the implicit conversion from elements to single segment matching. Also, it's good to really interpret
it as the beginning of the path.
The query parameters part of the URL is modelled by the urldsl.language.QueryParameters[Q, A]
. As for the
PathSegment
class, this is essentially a class that has two methods matchRawUrl
and createParams
. Analogously to
the /
operator of path segments, the query parameters have an operator &
to compose them and build more complicated
query parameters.
The tupling of the type parameters works the same way as for path.
There are two main built in query parameters that you can use as building blocks for most of yours needs:
param[T](paramName: String)
: represents the value of the parameter with nameparamName
as a typeT
elementparam[T](paramName: String).?
: optional param, with value encoded asOption[T]
listParam[T](paramName: Strig)
: same asparam
but for lists.
Comprehensive examples can be found in here. Below we give a quick overview.
The following examples assume the following import:
import urldsl.language.QueryParameters.simpleParamErrorImpl._
Here are a bunch of things that you can do with the query parameters:
(param[String]("foo") & param[Int]("bar")).matchRawUrl(
"http://localhost:8080/home?foo=hello&bar=3"
) // returns ("hello", 3)
(param[Int]("bar") & param[String]("foo")).matchRawUrl(
"http://localhost:8080/home?foo=hello&bar=3"
) // returns (3, "hello")
(listParam[Int]("numbers")).matchRawUrl(
"http://localhost:8080/home?numbers=1&numbers=2"
) // returns List(1, 2) (however you should assume that it could be List(2, 1) in a non predictible way)
The significant difference between /
for paths and &
for parameters is that &
is commutative. That is, the string
"foo=hello&bar=3" is equivalent to "bar=3&foo=hello" (this is obviously not the case for /
). The &
operator of
QueryParameters
is however not commutative, but it essentially is (we say that it is quasi-commutative).
Let's expose what this means. Suppose we have two instances foo
and bar
respectively of types
QueryParameters[String, A]
and QueryParameters[Int, A]
. Then foo & bar
and bar & foo
will both match the two
strings above, but the first one has type QueryParameters[(String, Int), A]
, while the other one has type
QueryParameters[(Int, String), A]
.
The last class is urldsl.language.Fragment
. It represents the fragment (sometimes called ref) part of the URL (which is the part after "#" at the end).
The fragment part is very basic compared to the other two. It is either present or absent, and you can invoke it with
import urldsl.language.simpleErrorImpl._
fragment[String] // extract the fragment information when it's there, failing otherwise
fragment[Int] // extract the fragment information when it's there, casting to int, failing otherwise
maybeFragment[String] // extract the fragment information wrapped in Some when it's there, or None otherwise (never failing)
empty // imposes that the fragment is absent, failing otherwise
Head over this test file.
Both PathSegment
s and QueryParameters
contain the type information of their content and the type information of the
errors they return. This allows the user to define its own ADT of errors that can be used to easily manage the errors
if needed.
There are however two kind of errors that are built in, see below.
The first kind of built in errors are the SimplePathMatchingError
and SimpleParamMatchingError
implementations.
These simple errors form a basic error system that contains error message as strings. The (probably) best usage of these
errors is to debug and begin to play with the library.
In order to use the simple errors, you need the following imports:
import urldsl.language.PathSegment.simplePathErrorImpl._
import urldsl.language.QueryParameters.simpleParamErrorImpl._
If you want to create your own ADT for errors, you need to do two things:
- first, you need an implementation of the
urldsl.errors.PathMatchingError
andurldsl.errors.ParamMatchingError
type classes, that you can set implicit for ease with the following - second, you create an instance of
urldsl.language.PathSegmentImpl
andurldsl.language.QueryParametersImpl
simply by use their constructor
Implementing these two type classes simply requires you to give a concrete implementation to some special errors that are needed for the default paths and segments built in helpers.
Then, wherever you want to use the library, you should import the contents of your implimentation, as shown in the "Simple errors" section above.
What about if you simply want to know whether something matches, but don't really care about the reason why? This would for example be the case when implementing a Router.
For that scenario, there is a type of error, called DummyError
that only has one instance, which is returned for
every failure.
In some methods, this error type also adds sugar on some methods (see, e.g., the filter
method of PathSegment
).
In order to use the dummy error, you need the following imports:
import urldsl.language.dummyErrorImpl._
url-dsl was thought with one possible goal in mind, the one of creating a routing system. An example of how to do that can be found here.
In 0.5.0 we replaced our Tupler
with the Composition
type from the tuplez library. It works exactly the same for most use cases, but if your data types are complex enough that URL-DSL previously gave you nested tuples, those tuples will generally be flattened now.
If you come from version 0.2.0, here are a few things that you should pay attention to.
If you need/want to abstract over all possible way to extract information from a URL, this is the way to go. Asking your user to give a UrlPart[T, E]
will allow them to provide any of the above mentioned classes, as well as their combinations.
Previously, if you needed to mix PathSegment
and QueryParameters
, you had to make the two imports:
import urldsl.language.QueryParameters.simpleParamErrorImpl._
import urldsl.language.PathSegment.simplePathErrorImpl._
With the addition of the fragment feature, we decided to create an instance for importing everythin at once:
import urldsl.language.simpleErrorImpl._
// or
import urldsl.language.dummyErrorImpl._
This should not impact you very much.
The project is decomposed in four packages:
url
: it contains parsing and rendering of urls (with encodings)vocabulary
: it contains the little blocks on which the dsl is builtlanguage
: it contains the actual implementation of the dslerrors
: it contains the implementation of the matching errors logic.
In order to flatten the tuples that are generated by the operators /
and &
, we use the Tupler
mechanism built by
@julienrf and orginiated from here.