rescript-edgedb
v0.7.0
Published
Use EdgeDB in ReScript.
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rescript-edgedb
Use EdgeDB fully type safe in ReScript. Embed EdgeQL right in your ReScript source code.
Getting started
There's a dedicated VSCode extension for
rescript-edgedb
that will give you a few goodies like in-editor errors for your ReScript EdgeQL queries. Install from here: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=GabrielNordeborn.vscode-rescript-edgedb. Read more about its capabilities here.
npm i rescript-edgedb rescript-embed-lang
Also make sure you have @rescript/core >= 0.5.0
. It's required.
Setup your bsconfig.json
/rescript.json
:
"bs-dependencies": ["@rescript/core", "rescript-edgedb"]
"ppx-flags": ["rescript-embed-lang/ppx"]
The rescript-edgedb
watcher needs to run for your EdgeQL to be compiled. Set up scripts in your package.json
to do that:
"scripts": {
"build:edgedb": "rescript-edgedb generate --output ./src/__generated__ --src ./src",
"watch:edgedb": "npm run build:edgedb -- --watch"
}
The CLI will walk upwards looking for
edgedb.toml
in order to find how to connect to your database. So, you don't need to give the CLI any details on how to connect your database (although you can if you want).
--src
should point to the root directory where you have ReScript files that contain%edgeql
tags you want compiled. This directory will be searched (and watched) recursively.--output
should point to the directory where you want all generated files to end up. This needs to be a directory that's part of your ReScript project, so the ReScript compiler can pick them up.
Writing queries
Finally, after starting npm run watch:edgedb
and ensuring the console output looks fine, we can write our first EdgeQL query:
// Movies.res
let findMovies = %edgeql(`
# @name findMovies
select Movie {
title,
status,
actors: {
name,
age
}
} filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle`)
Executing the query is done by passing it the client
, and arguments if it takes any.
let findMovies = %edgeql(`
# @name findMovies
select Movie {
title,
status,
actors: {
name,
age
}
} filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle`)
// array<movie>
let movies = await client->findMovies({
movieTitle: title,
})
There's just one thing to notice in relation to regular EdgeQL - we require you to put a comment at the top of your query with a @name
annotation, naming the query. This is because we need to be able to discern which query is which in the current ReScript file, since you can put as many queries as you want in the same ReScript file.
let
binding or module
EdgeQL can be written both as a let
binding like above, or as a module
binding:
// Movies.res
let findMovies = %edgeql(`
# @name findMovies
select Movie {
title,
status,
actors: {
name,
age
}
} filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle
`)
let movies = await client->findMovies({
movieTitle: "Jalla Jalla",
})
module DeleteMovie = %edgeql(`
# @name deleteMovie
delete Movie filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle
`)
let _maybeDeletedMovie = await client->DeleteMovie.query({
title: "Jalla Jalla"
})
The only difference between these two is that the let
binding gives you access to the generated query
(which you use to execute the query) directly, whereas the module
binding gives you access to the entire generated module for the EdgeQL you write. This includes query
(like with the let
binding), the generated types for all of the query contents (args and response), and an extra transaction
function that you can use in transactions. More about transactions below.
let
binding style EdgeQL is the thing you'll use most of all - it's to the point, and can be defined anywhere. module
bindings need to be at the top level. But, sometimes you need it.
We might consider adding a "transaction mode" to the
let
binding as well in the future. Defining the queries inline is very powerful, and forcing you to define things at the top level because ofmodule
isn't the best DX at all times.
Using transactions
There's a transaction
function emitted for each EdgeQL query. You can use that to do your operation in a transaction:
let client = EdgeDB.Client.make()
// Remember to define your EdgeQL using a module, so you get easy access to all generated functions.
module InsertMovie = %edgeql(`
# @name insertMovie
insert Movie {
title := <str>$title,
status := <PublishStatus>$status
}`)
await client->EdgeDB.Client.transaction(async tx => {
await tx->InsertMovie.transaction({
title: "Jalla Jalla",
status: #Published
})
})
Cardinality
Cardinality = how many results are returned from your query.
EdgeDB and rescript-edgedb
automatically manages the cardinality of each query for you. That means that you can always trust the return types of your query. For example, adding limit 1
to the findMovies
query above would make the return types option<movie>
instead of array<movie>
.
Similarily, you can design the query so that it expects there to always be exactly 1 response, and error if that's not the case. In that case, the return type would be result<movie, EdgeDB.Error.operationError>
.
Here's a complete list of the responses your EdgeQL queries can produce:
void
- Nothing. No results are returned at all.array<response>
- Many. A list of all results.option<response>
- Maybe one.result<response, EdgeDB.Error.errorFromOperation>
Exactly one. Or an error.
The CLI
You can get a full list of supported CLI commands by running npx rescript-edgedb --help
. More documentation on the exact parameters available is coming.
So, how does it work?
rescript-edgedb
consists of 2 parts:
- A code generator that generates ReScript from your EdgeQL.
- A PPX transform that swaps your
%edgeql
tag to its corresponding generated code, viarescript-embed-lang
.
Take this query as an example:
// Movies.res
let findMovies = %edgeql(`
# @name findMovies
select Movie {
title,
status,
actors: {
name,
age
}
} filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle`)
The rescript-edgedb
tooling finds this %edgeql
tag, and generates a file called Movies__edgeql.res
from it, using code generation leveraging the official EdgeDB type generation tooling. That file will contain generated code and types for the findMovies
query:
// @sourceHash 18807b4839373ee493a3aaab68766f53
// @generated This file is generated automatically by rescript-edgedb, do not edit manually
module FindMoviesQuery = {
let queryText = `select Movie {
title,
status,
actors: {
name,
age
}
} filter
.title = <str>$movieTitle`
type args = {
movieTitle: string,
}
type response_actors = {
name: string,
age: Null.t<int>,
}
type response = {
title: string,
status: [#Published | #Unpublished],
actors: array<response_actors>,
}
let query = (client: EdgeDB.Client.t, args: args): promise<array<response>> => {
client->EdgeDB.QueryHelpers.many(queryText, ~args)
}
let transaction = (transaction: EdgeDB.Transaction.t, args: args): promise<array<response>> => {
transaction->EdgeDB.TransactionHelpers.many(queryText, ~args)
}
}
Thanks to rescript-embed-lang
, you don't have to think about that generated file at all. It's automatically managed for you.
VSCode extension
rescript-edgedb
comes with a dedicated VSCode extension designed to enhance the experience of using ReScript and EdgeDB together. Below is a list of how you use it, and what it can do.
NOTE: Make sure you install the official EdgeDB extension as well, so you get syntax highlighting and more.
Snippets
Snippets for easily adding new %edgeql
blocks are included:
These appear as soon as you start writing %edgeql
in a ReScript file.
In editor error messages
Any errors for your EdgeQL queries will show directly in your ReScript files that define them:
Easily edit queries in the dedicated EdgeDB UI
You can easily open the local EdgeDB UI, edit your query in there (including running it, etc), and then insert the modified query back:
It works like this:
- Put the cursor in the query you want to edit.
- Activate code actions.
- Select the code action for opening the EdgeDB UI and copying the query.
- The local EdgeDB query editor UI will now open in your browser, and the EdgeQL query you had your cursor in will be copied to your clipboard.
- Paste the query into the query editor and make the edits you want.
- Copy the entire query text and go back to VSCode and the file which has your query.
- Activate code actions again and select the code action for inserting your modified query.
- Done!
FAQ
Should I check the generated files into source control? Yes, you should. This ensures building the project doesn't have to rely on a running EdgeDB instance (which the code generation tooling requires).
Contributing
rescript-edgedb
leverages Bun for local development, including running tests.