defmodule Ecto.Entity do
@moduledoc """
# Entity
The missing Elixir Phoenix package to achieve Ecto > 80% common operations with < 20% effort.
# Introduction
Inspired by Laravel-Php Eloquent package, Entity includes injectable functions that makes it enjoyable to interact with your database.
When using Entity, each database table has a corresponding Schema(Model) that is used to interact with that table.
In addition to retrieving records from the database table, Entity allows you to insert, update, and delete records from the table as well.
The goal of this package is to make it deadly simple to interact with Ecto without having to necessary write custom CRUD operations.
# Getting Started
This guide is an introduction to Entity, the missing Phoenix Ecto package to achieve +80% of common operations
less than 20% of effort it would normally take.
Entity provides a standardized API and a set of abstractions for interacting with database tables, so that your phoenix Elixir developers
can focus on what's specific to your project.
In this guide, we're going to learn some basics about Entity, such as creating,
reading, updating and destroying records from a database. If you want
to see the code from this guide, you can view it [at kamaroly/ecto_entity on GitHub](https://github.com/kamaroly/ecto_entity).
**This guide will require you to have setup Entity beforehand.**
## Install Entity in your Phoenix / Elixir App
To add Entity to your application, The first step is to add Entity to your `mix.exs` file,
which we'll do by changing the `deps` definition in that file to this:
```elixir
defp deps do
[
{:ecto_entity, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
end
```
Then, to install it, you will run this command:
```
mix deps.get
```
To start off with, we'll need to include `Entity` in our existing Phoenix Schema like the following:
```elixir
defmodule MyApp.Person do
import Ecto.Changeset
use Ecto.Schema
use Entity
schema "people" do
field :first_name, :string
field :last_name, :string
field :age, :integer
end
def changeset(entity, attrs) do
entity
|> cast(attrs, [:first_name, :last_name])
|> validate_required([:first_name, :last_name])
end
end
```
## The `create/1` and `insert/1` function
You can use `create` or `insert` stores a new data entry. Schema module must have changeset method implementedUse the create method,
which accepts an schema of attributes, creates, and inserts it into the database.
The newly created schema will be returned by the create function.
```elixir
iex> Person.create(%{first_name: "Hand", last_name: "Turner", age: 3})
{:ok,
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 125,
first_name: "Hand",
last_name: "Turner",
age: 3
}}
```
## Reading methods
### The `find/1` returns entry with id matching what passed
```elixir
iex> Person.find(5)
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 5,
first_name: "Kristopher",
last_name: "Keeling",
age: 9
}
```
### The `all/0` function to return all table entries
Retrieves all database entries from a schema module
```elixir
iex> Person.all()
[
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 1,
first_name: "German",
last_name: "OConnell",
age: 2
},
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 2,
first_name: "Fritsch",
last_name: "Kassulke",
age: 8
},
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 3,
first_name: "Russel",
last_name: "Collins",
age: 3
}
]
```
### The `take/1` function to return x number of records
```elixir
iex> Person.take(2)
[
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 1,
first_name: "German",
last_name: "OConnell",
age: 2
},
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 2,
first_name: "Fritsch",
last_name: "Kassulke",
age: 8
}
]
```
### The `first/0` function to return the first table entry
### The `last/0` function to return the last table entry
## The `update/2` function
### Updates a table record by ID
```elixir
iex> Person.update(1, %{first_name: "Kamaro"})
iex> {:ok,
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 1,
first_name: "Kamaro",
last_name: "Yundt",
age: 7
}}
```
### Updates entity by its schema
```elixir
iex(1)> person = Person.find(1)
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 1,
first_name: "Weber",
last_name: "Ok 2",
age: 7
}
iex(2)> Person.update(person, %{first_name: "Kamaro"})
{:ok,
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:loaded, "people">,
id: 1,
first_name: "Kamaro",
last_name: "Ok 2",
age: 7
}}
```
## The `delete/1` and `destroy/` functions
#### `delete`
```elixir
iex(2)> Person.delete(7)
{:ok,
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:deleted, "people">,
id: 7,
first_name: "Glover",
last_name: "Schimmel",
age: 2
}}
```
#### `destroy`
```elixir
iex(3)> Person.destroy(2)
{:ok,
%Person{
__meta__: #Ecto.Schema.Metadata<:deleted, "people">,
id: 2,
first_name: "Ruecker",
last_name: "Lemke",
age: 0
}}
```
"""
defmacro __using__(_) do
quote do
use Ecto.Entity.{
DB,
PubSub,
Helpers,
Changes,
Create,
Read,
Update,
Delete,
Conditions,
Association
}
end
end
end