2.7 KiB
FunctionalCuid
FunctionalCuid
is a CUID generator written in and designed for F#, which can be used from any .NET language.
What Is a CUID?
The best answer to that question can be found on the README from the author. The short version is that it's a Collision-resistant Unique IDentifier (CUID) that can be generated wherever it needs to be (similar to GUIDs), but also follows a format that make them ever-increasing, which means that they can be indexed by even the most rudimentary of database systems.
Installing
(nuget link here)
Usage
For F#, FunctionalCuid
provides Cuid
and Slug
types as single-case discriminated unions, and modules to generate these types and convert them to their string representations. For string-based purposes, both Cuid
and Slug
also have a generateString
function that returns the same value, just as a string.
In F#...
module Examples
open Cuid
/// A CUID generated as the CUID type
let generatedCuid = Cuid.generate ()
/// Creating a CUID from a string you already know. This string must be 25
/// characters long, start with "c", and be valid base-36 (0-9 and a-z).
let cuidOfString =
match Cuid.ofString "cjz362bgd00005cus6t21gba0" with
| Error msg -> invalidOp msg
| Ok cuid -> cuid
/// Establish a valid CUID string using isValid and validationMessage instead.
let validatedCuidString =
let str = "abcdefg"
match Cuid.isValid str with
| true -> str
| false -> (Cuid.validationMessage >> invalidOp) str
/// Get the validation error for a CUID (empty string if CUID is valid).
let cuidErrorMsg = Cuid.validationMessage "howdy"
/// The string representation of a CUID
let cuidString = Cuid.generateString ()
For the Slug
type, just replace Cuid
with Slug
; the validation rules for Slug.ofString
are that the string has to be between 7 and 10 base-36 characters long.
For C# and VB.NET, the syntax is a bit different. Instead of Cuid
as it reads above, it will appear as CuidModule
; and, as generateString
, isValid
, and validationMessage
are the most likely functions (methods) called from those languages, their compiled names use Pascal case. The same holds true for the Slug
modules as well. A C# example...
using Cuid;
// ...
var cuid = CuidModule.GenerateString();
// example from an MVC controller
public IActionResult Get(string cuid)
{
if (CuidModule.IsValid(cuid))
{
// do something with it
}
else
{
return NotFound($"Could not find ID {cuid}; {CuidModule.ValidationMessage(cuid)}");
}
}