For all your labelling and tagging needs!™
Version 1.0.0
is backward-incompatible with other previous versions. Make sure to read the inline documentation to understand what this means, particularily the namespace fields that are required to be added on the Tag
schema.
When it comes to polymorphism, it's always hard to find a match-all solution. Each known implementation have tradeoffs:
- Real polymorphism (
taggable_id
,taggable_type
on theTaggings
model) breaks database level foreign keys, and makes requests slower. - Parent entity (Having each model have a
entity_id
refering to someEntity
model) and having tags assigned to theEntity
model viaentity_id
is cumbersome when performing complex queries and reverse queries. - Multiple nullable foreign keys on the
Taggings
model (Eguser_id
,post_id
) is a very good solution but it could become hard to maintain and enforce if many models are taggable. - One join table per taggable model (Eg
users_tags
andposts_tags
) make it impossible to consolidate and search using SQL queries only.
This package offers an implementation that fits the 3rd and 4th approaches, and it offers shortcuts and mix tasks to make your life easier.
If available in Hex, the package can be installed
by adding dymo
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:dymo, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
end
You should then configure Dymo to use the Repo you'd like. From your config, symply do:
config :dymo,
ecto_repo: MyApp.Repo,
create_missing_tags_by_default: false
Note that the
create_missing_tags_by_default
option is set tofalse
by default if you omit it, more on this later in this README.
Then, you can install the Tag
migration in your application (Note
that for umbrella apps, you'll need to first cd
into the app
containing your repo migrations):
$ mix dymo.install
* creating priv/repo/migrations
* creating priv/repo/migrations/20180828154957_create_tags.exs
Once done, you should start and make a join table for the model(s) you want to be able to label. There is a mix task for this too!
$ mix dymo.join_table MyApp.Post
* creating priv/repo/migrations
* creating priv/repo/migrations/20180828154958_create_posts_tags.exs
Once your database gets migrated, a new table posts_tags will be created.
You might want to add the following relationship to your MyApp.Post schema:
many_to_many :tags, Dymo.Tag,
join_through: "posts_tags",
on_replace: :delete,
unique: true
Alternativelly, you can simply use the `taggable()` macro in your schema declaration,
as long as you `use Dymo.Taggable` at the top of your module.
Note that you can tweak the migrations. For example, you can rename the
posts_tags
table to whatever you want (eg.taggings
) as long as you consistently specify it when using theTagger
macros:
use Dymo.Taggable, join_table: "taggings"
Once your database gets migrated, a new table posts_tags will be created.
If you follow the directives given by the tasks, you should then have a fully labellable Post model. Congratulations!
When a module uses Dymo.Taggable
, many shortcut functions are
backed into it.
It becomes easy to achieve labelling-related tasks. All the examples
bellow assyme that a Post
module calls use Dymo.Taggable
.
If you would like to see more advanced uses and how Dymo's API works, a good starting point is probably this file, which calls on most functions that you'll ever need.
To set the tags on an instance of a post:
post
|> Taggable.set_labels(~w(ten eleven), ns: :number, create_missing: true)
|> Taggable.set_labels([{:car, "Fort"}, {:color, "blue"}], create_missing: true)
|> Taggable.set_labels("Heineken", ns: :beer, create_missing: true)
Similarily, you can add / remove labels using Post.add_labels
and Post.remove_labels
.
You can also force labelling to only use existing tags (avoid on-the-fly creation) by passing appropriate options. For example:
post
|> Taggable.set_labels(~w(ten twelve), ns: :number, create_missing: false)
|> Taggable.add_labels("Pierre", ns: :name, create_missing: false)
The default option for functions that either set or add labels is to not create non-
existent tags. Passing the create_missing: true
option allows to create tags that were never seen
by the system before. The reason behind this choice is to prevent Dymo from inadvertently creating
infinite labels in your database if you ever decided to leave an endpoint open allowing that.
You can override this behaviour by doing the following in your config
files:
config :dymo, create_missing_tags_by_default: true
Sometimes, tags might be present in a database but it should be forbidden for some of them to become assigned to a taggable. For example, if some of the tags are stored for the sole purpose of structure, if they represent a parent tag that should never be attached itself, etc.
Dymo handles these cases by exposing an attribute on the Tag
model named assignable
. Tags can be attached
to taggables as long as their attachable
attribute is set to true - otherwise they will just be dropped from
tagging operations.
Note that operations such as set_labels
or add_labels
won't raise or error when unassignable tags are
given. Instead, they will just ignore these tags completely.
To get the labels associated with a given post, you have several options.
Using the association directly if you defined it:
post
|> Repo.preload(:tags)
|> Map.get(:tags)
|> Enum.map(&(&1.label))
Using the helper function:
# If the namespace is unspecified, the `:root` namespace is used.
post
|> Taggable.labels()
# Otherwise, only the labels from the given namespace are returned.
post
|> Taggable.labels(ns: :number)
You can also query models that are tagged with specific labels by doing the following:
# Match posts tagged with at least *one* of the tags.
Post |> Taggable.labelled_with(~w(ten eleven))
# Match posts tagged with at least *all* the specified tags.
Post |> Taggable.labelled_with([{:color, "blue"}, {"Heineken", :beer}], match_all: true)
Documentation can be generated with ExDoc and published on HexDocs. Once published, the docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/dymo.