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Convenient tools for creating Play JSON formatters and url binders for value classes

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play-bindings

Getting started

To use play-bindings in your project add the following to your build.sbt file:

libraryDependencies += "com.wellfactored" %% "play-bindings" % playBindingsVersion

The latest version number is shown in the badge above.s

How and why to use the bindings

A value class is a case class, of type W, that wraps a single value, of type V and optionally extends AnyVal. Value classes are a really convenient and lightweight way of strongly typing primitive values to avoid passing them to functions incorrectly. However, when you want to convert to/from JSON then the default implementations that Json.format[W] provides will generate or require an extra level of structure that is usually undesirable.

For example, given:

case class PersonId(id: Long) extends AnyVal
case class Person(id:PersonId, name:String)

then the default JSON would look like

    {
        "id": {
            "id": 1
        },
        "name": "Fred"
    }

when we'd rather just have

    {
        "id": 1,
        "name": "Fred"
    }

To do this you need to manually implement the JSON formatters that wrap and unwrap the structure. You need to implement similar boilerplate to be able to use the value classes in urls. This is a pain and adds significant friction to using value classes.

play-bindings uses a little bit of Shapeless (https://github.com/milessabin/shapeless) to generate all of this boilerplate for you seamlessly. Given PersonId as defined above then extending the appropriate traits or importing the contents of the relevant objects will let the compiler automatically provide instances of the following type classes:

  • Reads[PersonId] - wraps a Long in a PersonId when reading from Json
  • Writes[PersonId] - unwraps the Long when writing to Json
  • PathBindable[PersonId] - decodes a Long from a url path segment into a PersonId
  • QueryStringBindable - takes a Long value from a query parameter and converts it to a PersonId

The value type, V, must itself already have a type class instance in scope, e.g. Reads[String]. Play provides instances of all four type classes for all the primitive types.

Creating the binding instances

There are individual traits that contain implicit functions that will generate the relevant type classes:

  • trait ValueClassReads
  • trait ValueClassWrites
  • trait ValueClassPathBindable
  • trait ValueClassQueryStringBindable

There are also some traits and objects that combine the base traits in useful ways:

  • trait ValueClassFormats extends ValueClassReads with ValueClassWrites
  • object ValueClassFormats extends ValueClassFormats
  • trait ValueClassUrlBinders extends ValueClassPathBindable with ValueClassQueryStringBindable
  • object ValueClassUrlBinders extends ValueClassUrlBinders

If you add the following to the build.sbt for your play project:

routesImport += "com.wellfactored.playbindings.ValueClassUrlBinders._"

then you can bind path elements and query parameters to value classes in your controller methods without writing any further boilerplate code.

In the code where you are reading and writing JSON values you can either extend the relevant traits or use import com.wellfactored.playbindings.ValueClassFormats._ as you prefer.