guardsafe
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Macros expanding into code that can be safely used in guard clauses.
Guardsafe
Macros expanding into code that can be safely used in guard clauses.
Usage
Update your mix.exs
file and run mix deps.get
.
defp deps do
[{:guardsafe, "~> 0.5.0"}]
end
Import all the macros...
defmodule MyModule do
import Guardsafe
...or just the ones you need.
defmodule MyOtherModule do
import Guardsafe, only: [divisible_by?: 2, integer?: 1]
Now go forth and make your guard clauses more readable!
def leap_year?(year) when not integer?(year), do: raise "That's not a proper year!"
def leap_year?(year) when divisible_by?(year, 400), do: true
def leap_year?(year) when divisible_by?(year, 100), do: false
def leap_year?(year), do: divisible_by?(year, 4)
Documentation for each macro is of course available in iex
.
iex(1)> h Guardsafe.divisible_by?
defmacro divisible_by?(number, divisor)
Expands divisible_by?(number, divisor) into rem(number, divisor) == 0
Available macros
NB: If a macro is translated into a function residing in another module
than Kernel
you need to require it before use, e.g. require Integer
.
Macros for checking types
-
atom?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_atom/1
-
binary?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_binary/1
-
bitstring?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_bitstring/1
-
boolean?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_boolean/1
-
float?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_float/1
-
function?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_function/1
-
function?/2
- translates intoKernel.is_function/2
-
integer?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_integer/1
-
list?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_list/1
-
map?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_map/1
-
nil?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_nil/1
-
number?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_number/1
-
pid?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_pid/1
-
port?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_port/1
-
reference?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_reference/1
-
tuple?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_tuple/1
Macros for checking values
-
divisible_by?/2
- checks whether two integers are evenly divisible. -
even?/1
- returns true for even integers. -
odd?/1
- returns true for odd integers. -
within?/3
- checks whether a value is in the range of the last two arguments.
Macros for dates and times
-
date?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style date tuple. -
datetime?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style datetime tuple. -
time?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style time tuple.
These can come in handy when working with a library such as GoodTimes.
Why nil? and float? instead of is_nil and is_float
While the Elixir core team thinks that nil?
compared to is_nil
is an inconcistency, others, especially Rubyists, might be more comfortable with the nil?
notation. Honestly though, this is mostly intended as a display of how Elixir's metaprogramming capabilities can be used to shape the look and feel of the language itself.
Online documentation
For more information, see the full documentation.
Contributing
- Fork this repository
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b quis-custodiet-ipsos-custodes
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Guards! Guards!'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin quis-custodiet-ipsos-custodes
) - Create a new Pull Request