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| 1 | +--- |
| 2 | +layout: post |
| 3 | +author: rafa |
| 4 | +title: "Complete flows, partial models" |
| 5 | +date: 2019-07-15 19:55:56 +0200 |
| 6 | +comments: true |
| 7 | +categories: |
| 8 | +--- |
| 9 | + |
| 10 | +Most apps these days have a sequence of screens that gather information from the user, like a registration flow, a form of some kind. The data from each step is typically combined into a single data structure. |
| 11 | +For example, let's say we want the name, age, and the password to authenticate the user. |
| 12 | +<!--more--> |
| 13 | +One way to model it is by using the following data structure: |
| 14 | + |
| 15 | +```swift |
| 16 | +struct FormData { |
| 17 | + let name: String |
| 18 | + let age: Int |
| 19 | + let password: String |
| 20 | +} |
| 21 | +``` |
| 22 | + |
| 23 | +One issue we are going to come about is that our model is strict, it needs all the values at once, whereas users will supply each value at a time. First they will type in their name, then their age, and so on. |
| 24 | +Wrapping up the fields in `Optional`, may loosen its strictness. |
| 25 | + |
| 26 | +```swift |
| 27 | +struct FormData { |
| 28 | + let name: String? |
| 29 | + let age: Int? |
| 30 | + let password: String? |
| 31 | +} |
| 32 | +``` |
| 33 | + |
| 34 | +Our flow code might look like: |
| 35 | + |
| 36 | +```swift |
| 37 | +func firstStepFinished(with name: String) -> FormData { |
| 38 | + return FormData(name: name, age: nil, password: nil) |
| 39 | +} |
| 40 | + |
| 41 | +func secondStepFinished(with age: Int, partialFormData: FormData) -> FormData { |
| 42 | + return FormData(name: partialFormData.name, age: age, password: nil) |
| 43 | +} |
| 44 | + |
| 45 | +func thirdStepFinished(with password: String, partialFormData: FormData) { |
| 46 | + let formData = FormData(name: partialFormData.name, age: partialFormData.age, password: password) |
| 47 | + |
| 48 | + api.performLogin(with: formData) |
| 49 | +} |
| 50 | +``` |
| 51 | + |
| 52 | +However, now we need to `guard` against any `nil` values if we want to use them (for example, to make a network request). |
| 53 | + |
| 54 | +```swift |
| 55 | +guard let name = formData.name, |
| 56 | + let age = formData.age, |
| 57 | + let password = formData.password { |
| 58 | + return // what should we do here??? |
| 59 | +} |
| 60 | + |
| 61 | +// use data |
| 62 | +``` |
| 63 | + |
| 64 | +From a domain perspective, that `return` doesn't make any sense. |
| 65 | + |
| 66 | +One could argue that it's "save" to force unwrap in this case, or that there are [already a nice approach to this problem](https://www.swiftbysundell.com/posts/handling-non-optional-optionals-in-swift). |
| 67 | + |
| 68 | +One may say, _"we can raise an error to the user"_ or _"we could track it and check if users are getting stuck somehow"_. But, at the end of the day, this is not a good solution because you know that when the flow ends, you have all the values. |
| 69 | + |
| 70 | +Our model is "lying" to us. That's not loosen, it's just flawed. |
| 71 | + |
| 72 | +There are several approaches to make it better, like "one model per step": |
| 73 | + |
| 74 | +```swift |
| 75 | +struct FirstStep { |
| 76 | + let name: String |
| 77 | +} |
| 78 | + |
| 79 | +struct SecondStep { |
| 80 | + let name: String |
| 81 | + let age: Int |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | + init(firstStep: FirstStep, age: Int) { |
| 84 | + self.name = firstStep.name |
| 85 | + self.age = age |
| 86 | + } |
| 87 | +} |
| 88 | + |
| 89 | +struct ThirdStep { |
| 90 | + let name: String |
| 91 | + let age: Int |
| 92 | + let password: String |
| 93 | + |
| 94 | + init(secondStep: SecondStep, password: String) { |
| 95 | + self.name = secondStep.name |
| 96 | + self.age = secondStep.age |
| 97 | + self.password = password |
| 98 | + } |
| 99 | +} |
| 100 | +``` |
| 101 | + |
| 102 | +That's better! But there is also another way of doing things that doesn't involve duplication nor partial data structs. |
| 103 | + |
| 104 | +Instead of breaking down our data structure, why not to break down functions? |
| 105 | + |
| 106 | +Our `FormData` initializer, when interpreted as a function, has this shape: |
| 107 | + |
| 108 | +```swift |
| 109 | +(String, Int, String) -> FormData |
| 110 | +``` |
| 111 | + |
| 112 | +But we can break it down into plain old lambdas[^1], and by applying it to the initializer for our data structure: |
| 113 | + |
| 114 | +```swift |
| 115 | +(String) -> (Int) -> (String) -> FormData |
| 116 | +``` |
| 117 | + |
| 118 | +This technique is called [currying](https://www.pointfree.co/episodes/ep5-higher-order-functions#t42). What it does is, it allow us to translate the evaluation of a function that takes multiple arguments into evaluating a sequence of functions, each with a single argument. |
| 119 | + |
| 120 | +```swift |
| 121 | +func curry<A, B, C, D>( |
| 122 | + _ f: @escaping (A, B, C) -> D |
| 123 | +) -> (A) -> (B) -> (C) -> D { |
| 124 | + return { a in { b in { c in return f(a, b, c) } } } |
| 125 | +} |
| 126 | +``` |
| 127 | + |
| 128 | +The function above goes from a function that takes multiple arguments `(A, B, C)` and produces a `D`, to single functions, that take one argument each: `(A) -> (B) -> (C)` and produces a `D`, making it possible to partially apply each argument, one at the time, until it can evaluate and return the output value. |
| 129 | + |
| 130 | +Using it in our flow, may look like the following: |
| 131 | + |
| 132 | +```swift |
| 133 | +typealias Name = String |
| 134 | +typealias Age = Int |
| 135 | +typealias Password = String |
| 136 | + |
| 137 | +typealias FromFirstStep = (Age) -> (Password) -> FormData |
| 138 | +typealias FromSecondStep = (Password) -> FormData |
| 139 | + |
| 140 | +func firstStepFinished(with name: String) -> FromFirstStep { |
| 141 | + let curried = curry(FormData.init) // (Name) -> (Age) -> (Password) -> FormData |
| 142 | + return curried(name) // (Age) -> (Password) -> FormData |
| 143 | +} |
| 144 | + |
| 145 | +func secondStepFinished(with age: Int, partialData: FromFirstStep) -> FromSecondStep { |
| 146 | + return partialData(age) // (Password) -> FormData |
| 147 | +} |
| 148 | + |
| 149 | +func thirdStepFinished(with password: String, partialData: FromSecondStep) { |
| 150 | + let formData = partialData(password) |
| 151 | + |
| 152 | + api.performLogin(with: formData) |
| 153 | +} |
| 154 | +``` |
| 155 | + |
| 156 | +I've added a few `type aliases` just to make it more readable. |
| 157 | +Cleaning up them further, we'll have: |
| 158 | + |
| 159 | +```swift |
| 160 | +typealias FromThirdStep = FormData // just to be explicit |
| 161 | +typealias FromSecondStep = (Password) -> FromThirdStep |
| 162 | +typealias FromFirstStep = (Age) -> FromSecondStep |
| 163 | +``` |
| 164 | + |
| 165 | +If you ask me, this is much better because we didn't have to write anything else, other than the `curry`[^2] function itself, which can be used in other places. |
| 166 | + |
| 167 | +And that's it! Functions have saved the day :) |
| 168 | + |
| 169 | +P.S: I want to thank [Sean Olszewski](https://twitter.com/__chefski__), [Gordon Fontenot](https://twitter.com/gfontenot), [Peter Tomaselli](https://github.com/peter-tomaselli), [Henrique Morbin](https://twitter.com/morbin_), [Marcelo Gobetti](https://twitter.com/mwgobetti) and [João Rutkoski](https://github.com/joaortk) for their awesome review. |
| 170 | + |
| 171 | +[^1]: `functions take one argument and return one result.` From the book: [`Haskell Programming from First Principles`](http://haskellbook.com/) |
| 172 | + |
| 173 | +[^2]: Or just use the [Curry.framework](https://github.com/thoughtbot/Curry) |
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