YesQL-style SQL database abstraction.
YeshQL implements quasiquoters that allow the programmer to write SQL queries in SQL, and embed these into Haskell programs using quasi-quotation. YeshQL takes care of generating suitable functions that will run the SQL queries against a database driver, and marshal values between Haskell and SQL.
In order to do this properly, YeshQL extends SQL syntax with type annotations and function names; other than that, it is perfectly ignorant about the SQL syntax itself. See the YesQL Readme for the full rationale - Haskell and Clojure are sufficiently different languages, but the reasoning behind YesQL applies to YeshQL almost unchanged.
The project is split up into a core library, yesh-core
, and separate
libraries for the supported backends.
Use stack or cabal to install. Nothing extraordinary here.
In short:
{-#LANGUAGE QuasiQuotes #-}
import MyProject.DatabaseConnection (withDB)
import Database.HDBC
import Database.YeshQL.HDBC
[yesh|
-- name:getUser :: (String)
-- :userID :: Int
SELECT username FROM users WHERE id = :userID
|]
main = withDB $ \conn -> do
username <- getUser 1 conn
putStrLn username
Please refer to the Haddock documentation for further usage details.
Probably. The project is hosted at https://github.com/tdammers/yeshql, feel free to comment there or send a message to [email protected] if you find any.
YeshQL is rather heavily inspired by YesQL, so it makes sense to blatantly steal most of the name. Throwing in an "H" for good measure (this being Haskell and all) makes it sound like Sean Connery, which automatically increases aweshomenesh, so that'sh what we'll roll with.
YeshQL is Free Software and provided as-is. Please see the enclosed LICENSE file for details.