package ppx_string_conv

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Ppx extension for generating of_string & to_string

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

v0.17.0.tar.gz
sha256=2e43def9a3f13f46ac8465fa81d51784d080083539b88d3c6e8a649d5ae0fdb0

Description

Part of the Jane Street's PPX rewriters collection.

Published: 23 May 2024

README

ppx_string_conv

ppx_string_conv is a ppx to help derive of_string and to_string, primarily for variant types.

Non-variant uses

You can use [@@deriving string] in mlis & signatures as well as aliases (type t = ...) in mls.

module My_id : sig
  type t [@@deriving string]
end = struct
  type t = int [@@deriving string]
end

Choosing what to generate

Using [@@deriving string] generates both of_string and to_string.

If you only want to generate one of the functions, you can use [@@deriving to_string] or [@@deriving of_string] instead.

Variants

The primary use case of the ppx is to generate the stringable functions based on the variant names.

module Fruit = struct
  type t =
    | Apple
    | Pear
    | Orange
  [@@deriving sexp_of, string]
end
# let () = print_s [%sexp (Fruit.of_string "Apple" : Fruit.t)]
Apple
# let () = print_endline (Fruit.to_string Pear)
Pear
# let (_ : Fruit.t) = Fruit.of_string "some-bad-value"
Exception:
("Toplevel.Fruit.of_string: invalid string" (value some-bad-value))

Renaming with ~capitalize:"..." and [@rename "..."]

You can rename all variants systemically by passing the ~capitalize:"..." deriving argument.

Additionally, you can override the name for any variant using the [@rename "name"] attribute (in which case the ~capitalize rule won't be applied):

module Chassis_id_subtype = struct
  type t =
    | Chassis_component
    | Interface_alias
    | Port_component
    | Mac_address
    | Network_address
    | Interface_name
    | Local
    | Custom [@rename "something-custom"]
  [@@deriving string ~capitalize:"kebab-case", enumerate]
end
# let () = List.map Chassis_id_subtype.all ~f:Chassis_id_subtype.to_string |> List.iter ~f:print_endline
chassis-component
interface-alias
port-component
mac-address
network-address
interface-name
local
something-custom

For all the options you can use with ~capitalize, see this error message:

type t = Show_me_the_options [@@deriving string ~capitalize:"invalid"]
Line 1, characters 1-71:
Error: ppx_string_conv: invalid capitalize argument: (can be: PascalCase,
       camelCase, snake_case, Capitalized_snake_case, Pascal_Snake_Case,
       SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE, aLtErNaTiNg_sNaKe_cAsE, kebab-case,
       Capitalized-kebab-case, Pascal-Kebab-Case, SCREAMING-KEBAB-CASE,
       aLtErNaTiNg-kEbAb-cAsE, Sentence case, Title Case, lower sentence
       case, UPPER SENTENCE CASE, aLtErNaTiNg sEnTeNcE CaSe)

Fallback cases with [@fallback]

You can use [@fallback] to define a fallback case for the type used instead of raising. This allows you to define to_string and of_string pairs that will never fail and keep all information:

module Operational_state = struct
  type t =
    | Uninstalled
    | Normal
    | Faulted
    | Unable_to_parse of string [@fallback]
  [@@deriving sexp_of, string ~capitalize:"snake_case"]
end

For example,

# let () = print_endline (Operational_state.to_string (Unable_to_parse "hello"))
hello
# let () =
    let state = Operational_state.of_string "something-invalid" in
    print_s [%sexp (state : Operational_state.t)]
(Unable_to_parse something-invalid)

Custom types

If a non-string type is used, it will delegate to that type's of_string and to_string. If those functions raise, the exception will be propagated.

module Unrecognized = struct
  type t = string [@@deriving string]
end

type t =
  | Uninstalled
  | Normal
  | Faulted
  | Unable_to_parse of Unrecognized.t [@fallback]
[@@deriving string]

Case-insensitivity with ~case_insensitive

You can make the generated of_string functions case-insensitive by using the ~case_insensitive deriving argument:

module Case_insensitive_demo = struct
  type t =
    | Apple
    | Pear
    | Orange
  [@@deriving string ~case_insensitive]

  let show s = s |> of_string |> to_string |> print_endline
end
# let () = Case_insensitive_demo.show "apple"
Apple
# let () = Case_insensitive_demo.show "oRAngE"
Orange

Nesting with [@nested "prefix"]

You can nest types with a prefix to disambiguate

module Nested = struct
  type fruit =
    | Apple
    | Pear
    | Orange
  [@@deriving string ~capitalize:"snake_case", sexp_of]

  type animal =
    | Cat
    | Dog
  [@@deriving string ~capitalize:"snake_case", sexp_of]

  type t =
    | Fruit of fruit [@nested "fruit."]
    | Animal of animal [@nested "animal."]
  [@@deriving string, sexp_of]
end
# let () = print_endline (Nested.to_string (Fruit Pear))
fruit.pear
# let () = let t = Nested.of_string "animal.cat" in print_s [%sexp (t : Nested.t)]
(Animal Cat)

Any errors from the nested type's of_string will be exposed if the prefix matches:

# let (_ : Nested.t) =  Nested.of_string "animal.bad-animal"
Exception:
("Toplevel.Nested.animal_of_string: invalid string" (value bad-animal))

Note that ~case_insensitive works with prefixes too, but the part after the prefix will only be case-insensitive if the of_string implementation of the nested type is too

Empty prefix support (warning: potentially error-prone)

If you use [@nested ""] the behavior changes slightly; if no other case matches it will attempt to call the nested type's of_string, only using the fallback or raising if the nested call raises.

This is intended to allow you to extend one variant with other extra cases:

module Nested_no_prefix = struct
  type basic_state = On | Off [@@deriving string, sexp_of]
  type t =
    | Basic_state of basic_state [@nested ""]
    | Faulted
  [@@deriving string, sexp_of]
end
# let () = print_endline (Nested_no_prefix.to_string (Basic_state Off))
Off
# let () = let t = Nested_no_prefix.of_string "Faulted" in print_s [%sexp (t : Nested_no_prefix.t)]
Faulted
# let () = let t = Nested_no_prefix.of_string "On" in print_s [%sexp (t : Nested_no_prefix.t)]
(Basic_state On)

This is potentially error-prone if you have the same name for multiple types, or mix up case-sensitive and case-insensitive. The rules for which representation 'wins' will be stable but it's still worth being careful to avoid a situation where this can happen.

Dependencies (7)

  1. ppxlib >= "0.28.0"
  2. dune >= "3.11.0"
  3. ppx_string >= "v0.17" & < "v0.18"
  4. ppx_let >= "v0.17" & < "v0.18"
  5. capitalization >= "v0.17" & < "v0.18"
  6. base >= "v0.17" & < "v0.18"
  7. ocaml >= "5.1.0"

Dev Dependencies

None

Used by (1)

  1. ppx_jane >= "v0.17.0"

Conflicts

None

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