As a Ruby on Rails developer, when designing/implementing a web application I take essential concepts/entities from the problem domain and implement them as models. Typically, those are classes derived from a base ORM class (e.g. ActiveRecord::Base
), they map records from a database table and add contain extra methods that implement business logic related to the model.
Advantage of this approach is that you can quickly find all the business logic related to the object from the problem domain, so that if the model class is not large you can efficiently comprehend how that part of the application works. It also separated from all presentation logic. Besides, thanks to ORM the business logic methods contain little DB-specific code and thus quite clean and easy to read.
Disadvantage is that such classes often grow to an enormous size and thus difficult to understand as a whole.
So my questions are:
- Do Clojure ecosystem provide some libraries that fulfil a similar function as OOP's ORMs?
- What is the "Clojure way" to organize such code?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of the approach?
- Some articles / books / talks that explain and justify the approach?
- Are there some open source (example) applications that showcase the approach?