Ruqe brings the Result-Oriented Programming paradigm 🔥 to Flutter and Dart 🎯 programs, with its main purpose being to simplify development processes. It helps you create predictable responses from your functions or method operations 🎉.
Result-Oriented programming is a paradigm that enables you to take a results-focused approach to your app's architecture and design, giving you control over your application development processes and expected results ✨.
Ruqe provides convenient types and methods such as the Result
, Option
, Either
,
Pattern Matching
, etc. Additionally, the library provides an excellent techniques for handling errors gracefully without resorting to exceptions
.
Dive into Result-Oriented Programming with Ruqe, ensuring your app remains
responsive and reliable
🚀.
Note: The size of the library is 22KB. It's light weight, isn't it?
😍
In your Dart/Flutter project, add the dependency to your pubspec.yaml
dependencies:
ruqe: ^1.3.6
import with
import 'package:ruqe/ruqe.dart';
We will begin by firstly defining our data models:
class User {
User({required this.id, required this.name});
final String id;
final String name;
}
abstract interface class IAuthService {
Future<User> getUser(String userId);
}
class AuthService implements IAuthService {
final Client client;
AuthService(this.client);
@override
Future<User> getUser(String userId) async {
final response = await client.get(Uri.parse("fake-user.com"));
final json = jsonDecode(response.body);
if (response.statusCode == 200) {
return User.fromJson(json["data"]);
}
throw Panic(json["message"]);
}
}
abstract interface class IAuthRepository {
Future<Result<User, String>> getUser(String userId);
}
class AuthRepository implements IAuthRepository {
final IAuthService service;
AuthRepository(this.service);
@override
Future<Result<User, String>> getUser(String userId) async {
try {
final response = await service.getUser(userId);
return Ok(response);
} on Panic catch (error) {
return Err(error.message);
}
}
}
class Contact extends StatefulWidget {
const Contact({super.key});
@override
State<Contact> createState() => _ContactState();
}
class _ContactState extends State<Contact> {
late AuthRepository repository;
@override
void initState() {
repository = AuthRepository(AuthService(Client()));
super.initState();
}
@override
Widget build(BuildContext context) {
Result<User, String> user = Ok(User(id: "001-JON", name: "John Doe"));
return FutureBuilder(
future: repository.getUser("002-IOS"),
initialData: user,
builder: (context, snapshot) {
final data = snapshot.data;
return data!.match<Widget>(
ok: (value) => Text(value?.name ?? ""),
err: (_) => const SizedBox.shrink(),
);
},
);
}
}
This match
method allows developers to perform pattern matching operations on
Option instances, simplifying conditional logic and enhancing code readability.
final Option<String> asData = None();
final data = asData.match(
ok: (value) => value,
err: () => null
);
print(data);
In Ruqe, there is a clear distinction between recoverable and unrecoverable errors.
Recoverable errors do not cause a program to terminate completely. Ruqe makes unrecoverable
error recoverable by matching the returned value of type Result
and Option
with the .match<T>
convenient method.
void main() {
/// Calling [stringToNum] with an alphanumeric
/// data will trigger an exception.
var trigger = stringToNum("%65");
/// With pattern matching, we were able to recover from the
/// exception thrown from calling [int.parse()] and return
/// 0 instead.
var result = trigger.match<int?>(
ok: (value) => value,
err: (_) => 0,
);
print("Result: $result"); // Result: 0
}
Result<int, String> stringToNum(String str) {
try {
var value = int.parse(str);
return Ok(value);
} catch (err) {
return Err("Value is none");
}
}
Unrecoverable errors cause a program to terminate immediately. In Ruqe, [Panic] terminates the program when it comes across with an unrecoverable error.
What can trigger a panic?
typedef ListMap = List<Map<String, String>>;
typedef AppError = String;
var data = [
{"first_name": "Tunbnad", "last_name": "Smart"},
{"first_name": "Lambo", "last_name": "Turnner"}
];
void main() {
var firstNames1 = getFirstName(data);
print(firstNames1.unwrap()); // [Tunbnad, Lambo]
/// Unwrapping a value of [Option] that is [None]
/// will trigger a [Panic] and terminate the program.
var firstNames2 = getFirstName([]);
firstNames2.unwrap(); // panic with `[error]: an error occured!`
}
/// Returns a [Result] that is [Err] if [ListMap] is empty.
Result<List<String?>, AppError> getFirstName(ListMap data) {
if (data.isNotEmpty) {
return Ok(data.map((user) => user["first_name"]).toList());
} else {
return Err("[error]: an error occurred!");
}
}