~M
sigil for map shorthand. ~M{a} ~> %{a: a}
1) Add {:shorter_maps, "~> 2.0"},
to your mix deps
2) Add import ShorterMaps
to the top of your module
3) DRY up your maps and structs with ~M
and ~m
. Instead of %{name: name}
use ~M{name}
, and for %{"name" => name}
use ~m{name}
. When the key and
the variable don't match, don't fret: ~M{name, id: current_id}
expands
to %{name: name, id: current_id}
.
Code like %{id: id, name: name, address: address}
occurs with high frequency
in many programming languages. In Elixir, additional uses occur as we pattern
match to destructure existing maps.
ES6 provided javascript with a shorthand to create maps with keys inferred by
variable names, and allowed destructuring those maps into variables named for
the keys. ShorterMaps
provides that functionality to Elixir.
~M
and ~m
can be used to replace maps anywhere in your code. The
ShorterMaps
sigil syntax operates just like a vanilla elixir map, with two
main differences:
1) When a variable name stands alone, it is replaced with a key-value pair,
where the key is the variable name as a string (~m) or an atom (~M). The value
will be the variable. For example, ~M{name, id: get_free_id()}
expands to
%{name: name, id: get_free_id()}
.
2) Struct names are enclosed in the sigil, rather than outside, e.g.:
~M{%StructName key, key2}
=== %StructName{key: key, key2: key2}
. The
struct name must be followed by a space, and then comma-separated keys.
Structs can be updated just like maps: ~M{%StructName old_struct|key_to_update}
iex> import ShorterMaps
...> name = "Chris"
...> id = 6
...> ~M{name, id}
%{name: "Chris", id: 6}
# It's ok to mix in other expressions:
...> ~M{name, id: id + 200}
%{name: "Chris", id: 206}
# or even nest the sigil (note the change in delimiters to paren):
...> ~M{name, id, extra_copy: ~M(name, id)}
%{name: "Chris", id: 6, extra_copy: %{name: "Chris", id: 6}}
# We can use String keys:
...> ~m{name, id}
%{"name" => "Chris", "id" => 6}
# And we can update existing maps:
...> map_1 = %{name: "Bob", id: 9}
...> ~M{map_1|name}
%{name: "Chris", id: 9}
# Struct syntax is a little funky:
...> defmodule MyStruct do
...> defstruct [id: nil, name: :default]
...> end
...> ~M{%MyStruct id}
%MyStruct{id: 6, name: :default}
# Structs can be updated too:
...> initial_struct = %MyStruct{name: "Chris", id: :unknown}
...> ~M{%MyStruct initial_struct|id}
%MyStruct{name: "Chris", id: 6}
# Because the expansion happens at compile time, they can be used __anywhere__:
# in function heads:
...> defmodule MyModule do
...> def my_func(~M{name, _id}), do: {:id_present, name}
...> def my_func(~M{name}), do: {:no_id, name}
...> end
# in pattern matches:
...> ~M{age, model} = %{age: -30, model: "Delorean", manufacturer: "AMC"}
...> age
-30
ShorterMaps adds additional features to the original project, ShortMaps
,
located here. The reasons for the divergence are summarized
here.
~M{a, b}
=> %{a: a, b: b}
~m{a, b}
=> %{"a" => a, "b" => b}
~M{%Person id, name}
=> %Person{id: id, name: name}
~M{^a, b}
=> %{a: ^a, b: b}
~M{_a, b}
=> %{a: _a, b: b}
~M{old|a, b, c}
=> %{old|a: a, b: b, c: c}
~M{%Person old_struct|name} => %Person{old_struct|name: name}
~M{a, b: b_alt}
=> %{a: a, b: b_alt}
~M{a, b: a + 1}
=> %{a: a, b: a + 1}
~M{a, b()}
=> %{a: a, b: b()}
~m{blah}a == ~M{blah}
or ~M{blah}s == ~m{blah}
Note: you must import ShorterMaps
for the sigils to work.