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JsonView

Render json easier with relationship and custom data rendering

Installation

The package can be installed by adding json_view to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:json_view, "~> 0.2.0"}
  ]
end

Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/json_view.

How to use it

Normally, you query data from database then render to JSON and return to client, and you might want to:

  • Keep the original value
  • Return value in a new format, or return some calculated data
  • Render relationships that defined by Ecto schema

JsonView helps to render json data easier by support relationship and custom render data. Most of the time you may want to add it to your view:

  def view do
    quote do
      ...
      use JsonView
      ...
    end
  end

Or you can use it directly on your view

  defmodule MyApp.UserView do
      use JsonView
      def render("user.json", %{user: user}) do
      	render_json(user, [:first_name, :last_name, :vatar], [], [])
      end
  end
      
  defmodule MyApp.PostView do
      use JsonView

      # define which fields return without modifying
      @fields [:title, :content, :excerpt, :cover]
      # define which fields that need to format or calculate, you have to define `render_field/2` below
      @custom_fields [:like_count]
      # define which view used to render relationship
      @relationships [author: MyApp.UserView]

      def render("post.json", %{post: post}) do
          # 1st way if `use JsonView`
          render_json(post, @fields, @custom_fields, @relationships)
      end

      def render_field(:like_count, item) do
          # load like_count from some where
      end
  end

And then use it

post = %Post{
	title: "Hello JsonView",
	excerpt: "Now you can render Json easier",
	content: "Install and put it to work",
	cover: nil,
	inserted_at: ~N[2021-07-05 00:00:00],
	updated_at: ~N[2021-07-09 00:00:00],
	author: %User{
		first_name: "Daniel",
		last_name: "James",
		email: "daniel@example.com",
		avatar: nil,
		inserted_at: ~N[2021-06-30 00:00:00]
		updated_at: ~N[2021-07-02 00:00:00]
	}
}

MyApp.PostView.render("post.json", %{post: post})

# or invoke from PostController
render(conn, "post.json", post: post)

This is the result that you can use to return from PhoenixController

%{
	title: "Hello JsonView",
	excerpt: "Now you can render Json easier",
	content: "Install and put it to work",
	cover: nil,
  like_count: nil,
	author: %{
		first_name: "Daniel",
		last_name: "James"
	}
}

How to define fields and relationships

  • Custom field

    @custom_fields [:like_count]
    # this invokes `render(:like_count, post)`
    
    @custom_fields [like_count: &my_function/1]
    # this invokes `my_function.(post)`
  • Relationship

    @relationships [author: MyApp.UserView]
    # this invokes `MyApp.UserView.render("user.json", %{user: user})`
    
    @relationships [author: {MyApp.UserView, "basic_profile.json"}]
    # this invokes `MyApp.UserView.render("basic_profile.json", %{user: user})`

Data override

JsonView render fields -> custom_fields -> relationships. If they define same field, then the latter will override the prior

Default fields

You can pass a list of default fields and/or custom_fields as options to use JsonView. These fields then merged to fields and custom_fields before rendering data each time you invoke render_json

  use JsonView, fields: [:id, :updated_at], custom_fields: [inserted_at: &to_local_time/2]

Render hook

You can pass a function to process data after JsonView completes rendering like this:

  use JsonView, after_render: &convert_all_datetime_to_local/1

  def convert_all_datetime_to_local(data) do
    Enum.map(data, fn {k, v} ->
      v =
        case v do
          %NaiveDateTime{} -> to_local_datetime(v)
          _ -> v
        end
      {k, v}
    end)
    |> Enum.into(%{})
  end