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What is an opaque type in Elm and why is it valuable?

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elm

I've used types before but don't know what an opaque type is. I've seen it mentioned as well. Is it better to expose an opaque type than a type alias?

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Nathan Avatar asked Nov 24 '16 20:11

Nathan


1 Answers

Let’s answer this question by first looking at type aliases:

A type alias is fully transparent. This means that any other module importing it will have full access to its inner workings. Let’s say we’ve got a User module exposing a User type:

module User exposing User

type alias User =
    { userName : String
    , age : Int
    }

Anyone importing User can manipulate the data, e.g. newUser = { oldUser | age = 25 }. Or do someUser = User "Bill" 27. These manipulations are fine when you have control over the context that they exist in.

However, if User is part of a library then every change to the User type is a breaking change to people that use the library. For example, if an email field is added to User, then the constructor example (someUser = User "Bill" 27) will give a compiler error.

Even inside of a project codebase, a type alias can provide too much information to other modules which leads to code that is difficult to maintain and evolve. Perhaps a User changes drastically at some point and has a completely new set of properties. This would require changes wherever the code manipulates Users.

Opaque types are valuable because they avoid these issues. Here’s an opaque version of User:

module User exposing User

type User =
    User
        { userName : String
        , age : Int
        }

With this version, other modules cannot access or manipulate the data directly. Often, this means you will make and expose some getter and functions:

initUser : String -> Int -> User
userName : User -> String
age : User -> String
setAge : Int -> User -> User

This is more work, but it has advantages:

  • Other modules only care about the User functions and don’t need to know what data is in the type
  • The type can be updated without breaking code outside the containing module

Much of this explanation comes from @wintvelt: elmlang.slack.com

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Nathan Avatar answered Nov 16 '22 08:11

Nathan