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Ruqe brings the convenient types and methods found in Rust into Dart, such as the Result, Option, pattern-matching, etc.

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ruqe

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 🎉.

What is Result Oriented Programming?

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? 😍

Getting started

In your Dart/Flutter project, add the dependency to your pubspec.yaml

dependencies:
  ruqe: ^1.3.6

import with

import 'package:ruqe/ruqe.dart';

Basic usage

#[ How Result-Oriented Programming solves the problem ]

We will begin by firstly defining our data models:

    class User {
        User({required this.id, required this.name});
        
        final String id;
        final String name;
    }

Service layer:

    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"]);
        }
    }

Repository Layer:

    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);
             }
        }
    }

View Layer:

    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(),
                    );
                }, 
            );
        }
    }

#[ Option instance pattern matching ]

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);

#[ Recoverable and Unrecoverable Errors ]

In Ruqe, there is a clear distinction between recoverable and unrecoverable errors.

1. Recoverable 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");
  }
}

2. Unrecoverable errors:

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!");
  }
}

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Ruqe brings the convenient types and methods found in Rust into Dart, such as the Result, Option, pattern-matching, etc.

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