@hackage nested-routes0.3.1

Declarative, compositional Wai responses

A method to writing Wai responses

This library attempts to make it easier to write nice Wai response handlers by giving us a Sinatra/ Scotty-like syntax for declaring HTTP-verb oriented routes, in addition to file-extension handling and rose-tree like composition. Not only do we have literal route specification, like Scotty & Spock, but we can also embed Attoparsec parsers directly in our routes, with our handlers reflecting their results. As an example:

router :: Application
router = route handlers
  where
    handlers = do
      handleLit o
        (Left $ get $ text "home")
        Nothing
      handleLit (l "foo" </> l "bar" </> o)
        (Left $ get $ text "foobar") $ Just $
        handleParse (p ("baz",double) </> o)
          (\d -> Right $ get $ textOnly $ LT.pack (show d) `LT.append` " bazs")
          Nothing
      handleParse (p ("num",double) </> o)
        (\d -> Right $ get $ textOnly $ LT.pack $ show d) $ Just $
        handleLit (l "bar" </> o)
           (\d -> Left $ get $ text $ (LT.pack $ show d) `LT.append` " bars")
           Nothing

The route specification syntax is a little strange right now - l specifies a "literal chunk" of a handlable url (ie - l "foo" </> l "bar" </> o would represent the url /foo/bar), while p represents a "parsable" url chunk, which expects a pair - the left element being merely a reference name for the parser during internal plumbing, and the right being the actual Parser. o represents the end of a url string, and can be used alone in a handler to capture requests to the root path.

Each route being handled needs some kind of content - that's where the Either stuff comes in to play. For every parsed url chunk, the route expects a function of arity matching 1-for-1 with the parsed contents. For example, d -> ... in the demonstration above is such a function, where d :: Double.

We use the Either for a subtle reason - literal url strings may have a file extension, while url strings ending with a parser would not. get, post, etc. are all monadic expressions, accumulating a Map for HTTP verbs, likewise with text, lucid, json, bytestring etc., where they may also match a particular file extension. textOnly and the other -Only variants are not monadic, and simply give us a convenient unwrapper. Basically, url paths ending with a literal chunk are Left and contain a VerbListenerT z (FileExtListenerT Response m ()) m (), while paths ending with a parser are Right and contain VerbListenerT z Response m ().

When we test our application:

 λ> curl localhost:3000/
 ↪ "home"

requests may end with index

 λ> curl localhost:3000/index
 ↪ "home"

and specify the file extension

 λ> curl localhost:3000/index.txt
 ↪ "home"

each responding with the "closest" available file type

 λ> curl localhost:3000/index.html
 ↪ "home"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/foo/bar
 ↪ "foobar"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/foo/bar.txt
 ↪ "foobar"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/foo/bar/5678.5678
 ↪ "5678.5678 bazs"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/1234.1234
 ↪ "1234.1234"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/2e5
 ↪ "200000.0"
 λ> curl localhost:3000/1234.1234/bar
 ↪ "1234.1234 bars"