Expat - Reusable, composable patterns in Elixir.

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About

Expat is a library for creating composable pattern matchers.

That means, whenever you find yourself writing complex or long patterns in your functions, expat can be handy by allowing you to split your pattern into re-usable and composable bits.

These named pattern matchers defined with expat can be used, for example, to match over large phoenix parameters and keep your action definitions short and concise. Since programmers read code all the time, their code should be optimized for communicating their intent, so instead of having your brain to parse all the way down the large structure pattern it would be better to abstract that pattern with a name.

Also, as patterns get abstracted and split into re-usable pieces they could be exported so other libraries (or your own umbrella applications) can communicate the rules for matching data being passed between them.

To read more about the motivation and where this library comes from, you can read the v0 README

use Expat

Named Patterns

Let's start with some basic data examples. In Erlang/Elixir it's very common to use tagged tuples to communicate between functions. For example, a function that can fail might return {:error, reason} or {:ok, result}.

Of course these two element tuples are so small, that most of the time it's better to use them as they communicate the intent they are being used for.

But, using them can help us understand the basics of how expat works, just remember that expat takes patterns, and is not limited to some particular data structure.

defmodule MyPatterns do
use Expat
defpat ok({:ok, result})
defpat error({:error, reason})
end

So, just like you'd be able to use {:ok, result} = expr to match some expression, you can give the name ok to the {:ok, result} pattern.

Later on, at some other module, you can use those named patterns.

iex> import MyPatterns
iex> Kernel.match?(ok(), {:ok, :hey})
true

In the previous example, the ok() macro actually expanded to:

iex> Kernel.match?({:ok, _}, {:ok, :hey})
true

Notice that even when the ok pattern definition says it has an inner result, we didn't actually were interested in it, so ok() just ensures the data is matched with the structure mandated by its pattern and didn't bind any variable for us.

If we do need access to some of the pattern variables, we can bind them by giving the pattern a Keyword of names to variables, for example:

# One nice thing about expat is you can use your patterns
# anywhere you can currently write one, like in tests
iex> assert error(reason: x) = {:error, "does not exist"}
iex> x
"does not exist"

And of course, if you bind all the variables in a pattern, you can use its macro as a data constructor, for example:

iex> ok(result: "done")
{:ok, "done"}

That's it for our tagged tuples example.

Combining patterns

Now we know the basics of how to define and use named patterns, let's see how we can combine them to form larger patterns.

Let's use some structs instead of tuples, as that might be a more common use case.

defmodule Pet do
defstruct [:name, :age, :owner, :kind]
end
defmodule Person do
defstruct [:name, :age, :country]
end
defmodule MyPatterns do
use Expat
defpat mexican(%Person{name: name, country: "MX"})
defpat mexican_parrot(%Pet{kind: :parrot, name: name, age: age,
owner: mexican(name: owner_name)})
end
iex> vic = %Person{name: "vic", country: "MX"}
...> milo = %Pet{kind: :parrot, name: "Milo", owner: vic, age: 4}
...>
...> # here, we are only interested in the owner's name
...> mexican_parrot(owner_name: name) = milo
...> name
"vic"

And again, if you bind all the variables, it could be used as a data constructor

iex> mexican_parrot(age: 1, name: "Venus", owner_name: "Alicia")
%Pet{kind: :parrot, name: "Venus", age: 1, owner: %Person{country: "MX", name: "Alicia", age: nil}}

Then you could use those patterns in a module of yours

defmodule Feed do
import MyPatterns
def with_mexican_food(bird = mexican_parrot(name: name, owner_name: owner)) do
"#{name} is happy now!, thank you #{owner}"
end
end

And the function head will actually match using the whole composite pattern, and only bind those fields you are interested in using.

Guarding patterns

Since expat v1.0 it's now possible to use guards on your pattern definitions, and they will be expanded at the call-site.

For example, let's build this year's flawed election system.

defmodule Voting.Patterns do
use Expat
defpat mexican(%Person{country: "MX"})
defpat adult(%{age: age}) when is_integer(age) and age >= 18
end

Notice that the adult pattern matches anything with an integer age greater than 18 years (mexico's legal age to vote) by using when guards on the definition.

Notice the expat def can_vote? part in the following code:

defmodule Voting do
use Expat
import Voting.Patterns
def is_local?(mexican()), do: true
def is_local?(_), do: false
expat def can_vote?(mexican() = adult()), do: true
def can_vote?(_), do: false
end

expat stands for expand pattern in the following expression, and expand their guards in the correct place.

So our can_vote? function checks that the data given to it looks like a mexican and also (since we are =ing two patterns), that the data represents an adult with legal age to vote by using guards.

expat will work for def, defmacro, their private variants, case, and fn.

Actually you can give any expression into expat. And your patterns will be expanded correctly within it.

For example, the previous module could be written like:

# Since expat works at compile time, it and your pattern
# macros need to be available if you want to expand them.
use Expat, import: {Voting.Patterns, [:mexican, :adult]}
expat defmodule Voting do
def is_local?(mexican()), do: true
def is_local?(_), do: false
def can_vote?(mexican() = adult()), do: true
def can_vote?(_), do: false
end

Be sure to read the documentation and look at some of the tests.

Installation

def deps do
[
{:expat, "~> 1.0"}
]
end