In this article, I am going to solve the Word Count problem from Exercism in Elixir. I'll start with a form that would be familiar to an object-oriented programmer, then adjust it to show how clear code can be. I am going to talk through the language features that are used in some detail.
Elixir is a functional language. Functions are first class citizens. Data is immutable.
This is the statement of the problem:
Given a phrase, count the occurrences of each word in that phrase.
For example for the input "olly olly in come free"
olly: 2
in: 1
come: 1
free: 1
Words are compared case-insensitively. The keys are lowercase.
Hyphenated words such as co-operative are considered a single word.
In Elixir, functions live in modules.
This is from the file words.ex
Elixir uses snake_case for filenames, variables and functions, but PascalCase for modules.
Nested modules are represented by a dot in the name simulating namespaces in other languages, so that Module.Special
is a valid module name.
You can call public functions from another namespace, but not the private ones. Functions behave much like static functions do in C#, if you swap the class name for the module.
defmodule Words do
@seperator ~r/[ _,!&@$%^&:]/u
def count(sentence) do
Enum.reduce(String.split(String.downcase(sentence), @seperator, trim: true), %{}, &update_map/2)
end
defp update_map(word, acc) do
Map.update(acc, word, 1, &(&1 + 1))
end
end
I'll repeat that with line numbers so that it is easier to discuss (these are not part of the language):
01 defmodule Words do
02
03 @seperator ~r/[ _,!&@$%^&:]/u
04
05 def count(sentence) do
06 Enum.reduce(String.split(String.downcase(sentence), @seperator, trim: true), %{}, &update_map/2)
07 end
08
09 defp update_map(word, acc) do
10 Map.update(acc, word, 1, &(&1 + 1))
11 end
12 end
Line #1 defines the module, providing a scope for the functions. It ends on line #12
Elixir looks like Ruby but is more consistent in its block syntax. All blocks follow one of two patterns:
defsomething name [optional parameters] do
...
end
# or the shorter form:
defsomething name [optional parameters], do: ...
The later form makes sense for simple operations.
In this code, this is used to define a module
, a public function
and a private function
Line #03 defines a module attribute. This is equivalent to a constant in other languages but is more like a C preprocessor macro. Module attributes get substituted at compile time. You have to define it in the file before you use it. You are allowed to redefine it throughout the module. These are not visible outside the module nor do they exist at runtime.
This uses a regex sigil
~r
with a Unicode switch on the end. This defines a simple regex that splits on certain characters. Sigils are mapped to functions so ~r
becomes sigil_w/2
. You can use this to define your own if you need to.
Line #05 defines a public function. This ends on line #7. Elixir has no return statement as the last expression result in a function is the return value.
Line #06 is where most of the work happens. I have written this in a nested format but will spend some time tidying this up later.
Let's start with the inside of this function. It starts by calling String.downcase/1
on the sentence.
Elixir names the function by the module, name and arity. The arity being the number of parameters that the function has.
This passes the result to String.split/3
.
The last parameter of String.split/3
looks like it is a variable length list of options. However, it is actually a keyword list. A keyword list is a list of length 2 tuples where the first value is an atom.
This could be written as [{:trim, true}]
. The [
and ]
define a list, {
and }
define a tuple (a fixed length set of values). :trim
is an atom. These are mapped to a globally defined numeric identifier with an Erlang VM. true
is an alias for the atom :true
.
If a function has a keyword list as the last parameter then it can be expanded to give the illusion of a variable length parameter list.
Here the trim: true
option tells String.split/3
to ignore empty items in the split list. String.split/3
returns a list which is passed into Enum.reduce/3
Enum.reduce/3
(as you may guess from the name) takes three parameters. The first is the data to reduce. This can be any type that implements the enumerable protocol
. The second is the initial value of the accumulator, here an empty map %{}
. The third uses the capture operator &
to turn a function name into an anonymous function
.
Protocols are the equivalent of interfaces. They provide a set of methods that a module must define for a data type. Enum requires the type to implement the Enumerable protocol. The iex
REPL environment provides built in help, from iex
type h Enumerable
to get the documentation on the Enumerable protocol.
Functions in Elixir are called by the module, so we would call String.downcase('FIsh')
. Anonymous functions are slightly different.
The anonymous function defined here
my_fun = fun a -> a + 1 end
# would need to be called as:
my_fun.(7)
Anonymous functions are first class citizens and can be passed around as parameters. The capture syntax allows turning a function (including public functions defined in another module) into an anonymous function.
Lines #09 to #11 defines the private function update_map/2
Line #10 uses Map.update/4
The first parameter is the map. The second parameter is a key in the map. The third parameter is a default value to use if the key does not already exist in the map. The fourth is a function used to transform the existing value (technically it is a functor
, but Elixir generally does not use the formal terms).
Here we are using the short form of an anonymous function. &(&1 + 1)
is equivalent to the anonymous function that I defined above fn a -> a + 1 end
. It again uses the capture operator and references positional parameters by index.
This finishes the first pass through the module, but we can do better.
Elixir has some more syntactic sugar that will help here. You can use the pipeline operator |>
to remove the nesting.
a(b())
becomes b() |> a()
. The pipeline operator takes the output of the left hand side and puts it into the first parameter of the right hand side function.
Version 2
defmodule Words do
@separator ~r/[ _,!&@$%^&:]/u
def count(sentence) do
String.split(String.downcase(sentence), @separator, trim: true)
|> Enum.reduce( %{}, &update_map/2)
end
defp update_map(word, acc) do
Map.update(acc, word, 1, &(&1 + 1))
end
end
This is easier to understand. There is a convention to align the pipeline operator with the data that it was passed into.
We can go much further with this:
defmodule Words do
@seperator ~r/[ _,!&@$%^&:]/u
def count(sentence) do
sentence
|> String.downcase()
|> String.split(@seperator, trim: true)
|> Enum.reduce( %{}, &update_map/2)
end
defp update_map(word, acc) do
Map.update(acc, word, 1, &(&1 + 1))
end
end
This is a clearer read. You now can see the order of execution.
Now I am going to add a typespec to the code. The code so far looks untyped, but that is only because we have not restricted anything.
defmodule Words do
@separator ~r/[ _,!&@$%^&:]/u
@spec count(String.t()) :: map
def count(sentence) when is_binary(sentence) do
sentence
|> String.downcase()
|> String.split(@separator, trim: true)
|> Enum.reduce( %{}, &update_map/2)
end
@spec counter(list, map) :: map
defp update_map(word, acc) do
Map.update(acc, word, 1, &(&1 + 1))
end
end
Here I have made three edits to the solution. Each of the functions now has a typespec
and I have added a guard clause to count/1
. Typespecs allow static checking of the code. It's not a required part of the language but does add value in larger projects. There is a tool called dialyzer that can be used to statically check a codebase to ensure that all uses of a function conform to the typespec. Recent versions of Elixir (from version 1.10) will check that a function`s signature matches the typespec if a typespec is provided.
is_binary/1
is a guard clause. This can be used to assist with the definition of a type. Functions in Elixir use pattern matching which permits a function to have multiple clauses. Guard clauses provide the ability to add some extra details. The name binary comes from Erlang since it can be used to parse a binary file.
It's fairly common to have functions return two tuples {:ok, details}
and {:error, reason}
. Here is a process/1 function:
def process({:ok, details} = body) when is_string(details) do
IO.puts(details)
body
end
def process(body = {:error, reason}) do
IO.puts("Error, #{reason}")
body
end
This demonstrates a two clause function. If details are not a string then the first clause will not match and you will get a run time exception. The = body
is used for pattern matching to capture the entire tuple. This matching can happen on the left or the right. Pattern matching is also used to deconstruct the tuple to obtain the details. In both cases, the input is passed on to the output making them easy to chain with pipelines. This allows some sophisticated validation to be applied without needing to use an if
.
Elixir takes the following maxim from Erlang Unless you can handle an error "let it crash".
For more details on why see Joe Armstrong's doctorial thesis
This hopefully will make understanding the Elixir library of functions easier. The first parameter is normally where data will arrive via a pipeline. The last parameter is frequently used to provide options in a Keyword list.
If you want to find out more about Elixir why not join the Elixir track on Exercism where I am one of the mentors.
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