Macros expanding into code that can be safely used in guard clauses.
Update your mix.exs
file and run mix deps.get
.
defp deps do
[{:guardsafe, "~> 0.5.0"}]
end
Import all the macros...
defmodule MyModule do
import Guardsafe
...or just the ones you need.
defmodule MyOtherModule do
import Guardsafe, only: [divisible_by?: 2, integer?: 1]
Now go forth and make your guard clauses more readable!
def leap_year?(year) when not integer?(year), do: raise "That's not a proper year!"
def leap_year?(year) when divisible_by?(year, 400), do: true
def leap_year?(year) when divisible_by?(year, 100), do: false
def leap_year?(year), do: divisible_by?(year, 4)
Documentation for each macro is of course available in iex
.
iex(1)> h Guardsafe.divisible_by?
defmacro divisible_by?(number, divisor)
Expands divisible_by?(number, divisor) into rem(number, divisor) == 0
NB: If a macro is translated into a function residing in another module
than Kernel
you need to require it before use, e.g. require Integer
.
atom?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_atom/1
binary?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_binary/1
bitstring?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_bitstring/1
boolean?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_boolean/1
float?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_float/1
function?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_function/1
function?/2
- translates intoKernel.is_function/2
integer?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_integer/1
list?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_list/1
map?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_map/1
nil?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_nil/1
number?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_number/1
pid?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_pid/1
port?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_port/1
reference?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_reference/1
tuple?/1
- translates intoKernel.is_tuple/1
divisible_by?/2
- checks whether two integers are evenly divisible.even?/1
- returns true for even integers.odd?/1
- returns true for odd integers.within?/3
- checks whether a value is in the range of the last two arguments.
date?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style date tuple.datetime?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style datetime tuple.time?/1
- checks if the term is an Erlang-style time tuple.
These can come in handy when working with a library such as GoodTimes.
While the Elixir core team thinks that nil?
compared to is_nil
is an inconcistency, others, especially Rubyists, might be more comfortable with the nil?
notation. Honestly though, this is mostly intended as a display of how Elixir's metaprogramming capabilities can be used to shape the look and feel of the language itself.
For more information, see the full documentation.
- Fork this repository
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b quis-custodiet-ipsos-custodes
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Guards! Guards!'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin quis-custodiet-ipsos-custodes
) - Create a new Pull Request