44 lines
1.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
44 lines
1.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Introduction
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------------
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*servant* has the following guiding principles:
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- concision
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This is a pretty wide-ranging principle. You should be able to get nice
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documentation for your web servers, and client libraries, without repeating
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yourself. You should not have to manually serialize and deserialize your
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resources, but only declare how to do those things *once per type*. If a
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bunch of your handlers take the same query parameters, you shouldn't have to
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repeat that logic for each handler, but instead just "apply" it to all of
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them at once. Your handlers shouldn't be where composition goes to die. And
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so on.
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- flexibility
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If we haven't thought of your use case, it should still be easily
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achievable. If you want to use templating library X, go ahead. Forms? Do
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them however you want, but without difficulty. We're not opinionated.
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- separation of concerns
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Your handlers and your HTTP logic should be separate. True to the philosphy
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at the core of HTTP and REST, with *servant* your handlers return normal
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Haskell datatypes - that's the resource. And then from a description of your
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API, *servant* handles the *presentation* (i.e., the Content-Types). But
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that's just one example.
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- type safety
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Want to be sure your API meets a specification? Your compiler can check
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that for you. Links you can be sure exist? You got it.
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To stick true to these principles, we do things a little differently than you
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might expect. The core idea is *reifying the description of your API*. Once
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reified, everything follows. We think we might be the first web framework to
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reify API descriptions in an extensible way. We're pretty sure we're the first
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to reify it as *types*.
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To be able to write a webservice you only need to read the first two sections,
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but the goal of this document being to get you started with servant, we also
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cover the couple of ways you can extend servant for a great good.
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