Raffiot is small (almost) dependency-free python library providing some usual functional tools. It currently provides
- an easy-to-use
IOmonad which is stack-safe, fast, support asynchronous, concurrent, parallel programming, has many other features. - a
Resourcedata type for easy but reliable resource management. - a
Resultdata structure to represent errors
For a demo, just type this in a terminal:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/chrilves/raffiot.py/main/demos/raffiot_demo.sh | /bin/shThis demo runs 4 computations in parallel. It demonstrates how simple concurrent and parallel programing is in raffiot.
Note that this command will install raffiot in your current Python environment
The guide is online at https://chrilves.github.io/raffiot.py/index.html.
The API is online at https://chrilves.github.io/raffiot.py/api/index.html.
- pure python: Raffiot is written entirely in Python 3.7+.
- small: it is just a few small files.
- (almost) dependency-free: it only depends on
typing-extensions(for the@finalannotation). - crystal clear code
- stack safe: you just won't run into stack overflows anymore.
- fast: you won't notice the overhead.
- dependency injection made easy: make some context visible from anywhere.
- simple asynchronous and concurrent programming: full support of synchronous, asynchronous and concurrent programming with the same simple API.
- railway-oriented programming: clean and simple failure management.
- distinction between expected and unexpected failures: some failures are part of your program's normal behaviour (errors) while others are show something terribly wrong happened (panics). Yes, that's heavily inspired by Rust.
Python has the with construction, but Resource goes a step further.
- easy user-defined resource creation: just provide some open and close function.
- composability: the resource you want to create depends on another resource? Not a problem, you can compose resources the way you want. It scales.
- failures handling in resources:
Resourcehas everythingIOhas, including its wonderful failure management.
Did I mention Railway-Oriented Programming? Result is represent the 3 possible
result of a computation:
Ok(value): the computation successfully computed the thisvalue.Error(error): the computation failed on some expected failureerror, probably from the business domain.Panic(exception): the computation failed on some unexpected failureexception.