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diff --git a/web/tutorials/03-arrows.markdown b/web/tutorials/03-arrows.markdown new file mode 100644 index 0000000..607c0e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/web/tutorials/03-arrows.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,223 @@ +--- +title: Arrow Magic: Metadata Dependent Page Generation +author: Florian Hars +--- + +## Supporting a "published: false" attribute on pages + +Many content management systems or blog platforms support +some kind of workflow that display articles differently or +not at all depending on which state the article is in, for +example whether it has a "published" attribute or not. +Hakyll has no built-in support for anything like this, but since +its compilers are just arrows, it is easy to implement arbitrary +metadata dependent behaviour for rendering pages. + +Let's start by adding support for a "published" attributes to the +`simpleblog` example. We want to consider a blog post published if it +has a `published` metadata element that does not have the value +`false`. A function to test for this is simple: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +isPublished :: Page a -> Bool +isPublished p = + let published = getField "published" p in + published /= "" && published /= "false" +~~~~~ + +The next step is to write a function that tags a page with its +published status, which can be either unpublished or published, using +the standard `Either` datatype and then transform this function +into a `Compiler`. The latter can be done with the standard `arr` +function from `Control.Arrow`, which lifts a function into an arrow: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +isPagePublished :: Compiler (Page a) (Either (Page a) (Page a)) +isPagePublished = arr (\p -> if isPublished p then Right p else Left p) +~~~~~ + +For the next processing steps we now need a compiler that takes an +`Either (Page a) (Page a)` instead of the usual `Page a` as an +input. But the former can be built up from the latter using some +standard combinators from the `Control.Arrow` library. The simplest +one is `|||`, which takes two comilers (arrows) with the same output +type and returns a new compiler that takes an `Either` of the input +types of the Compilers as an input. Maybe we just want to render our +unpublished posts with a big warning that they are provisional, so we +just want to render the unpublished `Left` pages with another template +than the published `Right` pages: + +~~~~~{.haskell} + match "posts/*" $ do + route $ setExtension ".html" + compile $ pageCompiler + >>> isPagePublished + >>> (applyTemplateCompiler "templates/embargo-post.html" + ||| applyTemplateCompiler "templates/post.html") + >>> applyTemplateCompiler "templates/default.html" + >>> relativizeUrlsCompiler +~~~~~ + +With the conditional rendering in place, the next step is to hide +the unpublished posts from the homepage and the list of posts. +Both lists are generated from the results of a requireAllA call. +The last argument of requireAllA is a Compiler, and requireAllA +passes a pair consiting of the currently rendered page and a list +of all the required pages. All we have to do to suppress the pages +is to write a Compiler that takes such a pair as input, leaves the +first element of the pair unchanged and filters out all the unpublished +pages from list in the second element of the pair and then pass the +output from this compiler to the existing compilers handling the +list generation for the `index` and `posts` pages. + +Again, we can use a function from `Control.Arrow` to build this +compiler from simpler ones, in this case it is `***`, which combines +two arrows to one arrow from pairs to pairs. For our purposes, we +combine the identity arrow, which leaves its input unchanged, and an +ordinary `filter` on a list lifted into the compiler arrow: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +filterPublished :: Compiler (Page a, [Page b]) (Page a, [Page b]) +filterPublished = id *** arr (filter isPublished) +~~~~~ + +All that remains to do is to chain this compiler in front of the existing +compilers passed to requireAllA in the code for `posts.html` + +~~~~~{.haskell} + >>> requireAllA "posts/*" (filterPublished >>> addPostList) +~~~~~ + +and for `index.html`: + +~~~~~{.haskell} + >>> requireAllA "posts/*" + (filterPublished + >>> (id *** arr (take 3 . reverse . sortByBaseName)) + >>> addPostList) +~~~~~ + +You may have noticed that the code for the index page uses the same +`id *** something` construct to extract some elements from the list +of all posts. + +## Don't generate unpublished pages at all + +The above code will treat unpublished posts differently and hide them +from all lists of posts, but they will still be generated, and someone +who knows their URLs will still be able to access them. That may be +what you need, but sometimes you might want to suppress them +completely. The simplest way to do so is to leave the rendering +pipeline for `"posts/*"` unchanged and just add the `isPagePublished` +compiler at the end. This will not compile, since hakyll knows how to +write a `Page String`, but not how to write an `Either (Page String) +(Page String)`. But that can be amended by a simple type class +declaration: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +instance Writable b => Writable (Either a b) where + write p (Right b) = write p b + write _ _ = return () +~~~~~ + +Now hakyll will happily generate published pages and ignore +unpublished ones. This solution is of course slightly wasteful, as at +will apply all the templates to an unpublished page before finally +discarding it. You can avoid this by using the `+++` function, which +does for the sum datatype `Either` what `***` does for the product +type pair: + +~~~~~{.haskell} + match "posts/*" $ do + route $ setExtension ".html" + compile $ pageCompiler + >>> isPublishedPage + >>> (id +++ (applyTemplateCompiler "templates/post.html" + >>> applyTemplateCompiler "templates/default.html" + >>> relativizeUrlsCompiler)) +~~~~~ + +The other problem with this solution is more severe: hakyll will no +longer generate the index and posts pages due to a rare problem in +haskell land: a runtime type error. Hakyll tries to be smart and reuse +the parsed pages from the `match "posts/*"` when processing the +`requireAllA "posts/*"` calls by caching them. But the compilers there +still expect a list of pages instead of a list of eithers, so we have +to replace `filterPublised` with something that works on the +latter. Luckily (or, probably, by design), `Data.Either` provides just +the function we need, so the new filtering compiler is actually +shorter that the original, even though it has a more intimidating +type: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +filterPublishedE :: Compiler (Page a, [Either (Page b) (Page b)]) (Page a, [Page b]) +filterPublishedE = id *** arr rights +~~~~~ + +## Timed releases + +Exploiting the fact that compilers are arrows, we can do more mixing +and matching of compilers to further refine how hakyll deals with page +attributes like `published`. Maybe you want `cron` to update your blog +while you are on vacation, so you want posts to be considered +published if the `published` field is either `true` or a time in the +past. + +If you happen to live in the UK in winter or enjoy to do time zone +calculation in your head, your new function to test if a page is +published and the compiler derived from it might then look like this + +~~~~~{.haskell} +isPublishedYet :: Page a -> UTCTime -> Bool +isPublishedYet page time = + let published = getField "published" page in + published == "true" || after published + where + after published = + let publishAt = parseTime defaultTimeLocale "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M" published in + fromMaybe False (fmap (\embargo -> embargo < time) publishAt) + +isPagePublishedYet :: Compiler (Page a, UTCTime) (Either (Page a) (Page a)) +isPagePublishedYet = arr (\(p,t) -> if isPublishedYet p t then Right p else Left p) +~~~~~ + +This compiler has a pair of a page and a time as its input, and we can +use yet another function from `Control.Arrow` to construct a compiler +that generates the input for it, the function `&&&`. It takes two +compilers (arrows) with the same input type and constructs a compiler +from that type to a pair of the output types of the two compilers. +For the first argument we take the `pageCompiler` which we already +call at the beginning of the page compilation. The second argument +should be a compiler with the same input type as `pageCompiler` that +returns the current time. But the current time lives in the IO monad +and does not at all depend on the resource the current page is +generated from, so we have to cheat a little bit by calling +`unsafeCompiler` with a function that ignores its argument and returns +an `IO UTCTime`, which `unsafeCompiler` will unwrap for us: + +~~~~~{.haskell} + match "posts/*" $ do + route $ setExtension ".html" + compile $ (pageCompiler &&& (unsafeCompiler (\_ -> getCurrentTime))) + >>> isPagePublishedYet + >>> (id +++ ( ... as above ...)) +~~~~~ + +This is all we have to change if we don't generate unpublished pages +at all. If we just hide them from the lists, the call to `|||` +discards the information that a page is not (yet) published that was +encoded in the `Either`. In that case we could use the `setField` +function from `Hakyll.Web.Page.Metadata` to rewrite the `published` +field of the left and right pages in `isPagePublished(Yet)` to +canonical values that the original `isPublished` function called from +`filterPublished` understands: + +~~~~~{.haskell} +isPagePublishedYet = arr (\(p,t) -> if isPublishedYet p t then pub p else unpub p) + where + pub p = Right $ setField "published" "true" p + unpub p = Left $ setField "published" "false" p +~~~~~ + +The final version of this code can be found in the timedblog example, +together with the required `import` statements.
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