Every table in my DB needs to have a created_at
and updated_at
field for general hygiene and housekeeping. This leads to Persistent models which look like this:
User
email String Maybe
name String Maybe
tgramUserId TgramUserId Maybe
createdAt UTCTime
updatedAt UTCTime
deriving Show
Now, I have a bunch of APIs for creating users, based on different business cases. For example:
- createUserFromWebForm
- createUserFromTelegram
- createUserFromOAuth
I'd like the type-signatures of each of these APIs to be:
createUserFromX :: User -> SqlPersistM (Entity User)
However, this would mean that every call-site for createUserFromX
will need to call getCurrentTime
and set the createdAt
and updatedAt
house-keeping fields. What's the way to localize this complexity within these APIs itself?
One unclean (IMO) solution is to change the signature to:
createUserFromTelegram :: Maybe TgramUserId -> SqlPersistM (Entity User)
... but that defeats the purpose of using record-types in the first place (In this particular example, you can probably argue in-favour of this approach, but what if the record-type had 10 fields)?
User
it should be simple to refactor out a function likeupdateTimes :: User -> IO User
and just use this - if you want to do this for more thanUser
then you probably want to introduce some type-class for this