Book Image

Build Your Own Web Framework in Elixir

By : Aditya Iyengar
Book Image

Build Your Own Web Framework in Elixir

By: Aditya Iyengar

Overview of this book

Elixir's functional nature and metaprogramming capabilities make it an ideal language for building web frameworks, with Phoenix being the most ubiquitous framework in the Elixir ecosystem and a popular choice for companies seeking scalable web-based products. With an ever-increasing demand for Elixir engineers, developers can accelerate their careers by learning Elixir and the Phoenix web framework. With Build Your Own Web Framework in Elixir, you’ll start by exploring the fundamental concepts of web development using Elixir. You'll learn how to build a robust web server and create a router to direct incoming requests to the correct controller. Then, you'll learn to dispatch requests to controllers to respond with clean, semantic HTML, and explore the power of Domain-Specific Languages (DSL) and metaprogramming in Elixir. You'll develop a deep understanding of Elixir's unique syntax and semantics, allowing you to optimize your code for performance and maintainability. Finally, you'll discover how to effectively test each component of your application for accuracy and performance. By the end of this book, you'll have a thorough understanding of how Elixir components are implemented within Phoenix, and how to leverage its powerful features to build robust web applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Part 1: Web Server Fundamentals
4
Part 2: Router, Controller, and View
10
Part 3: DSL Design

Metaprogramming – Code That Writes Code

In this chapter, we will learn about one of the most powerful features of Elixir, metaprogramming. Writing a simple piece of Elixir code is referred to as programming, and writing Elixir code that programmatically injects behavior into other Elixir code is referred to as metaprogramming. Metaprogramming allows us to extend Elixir’s features and facilitate developer productivity by automating the otherwise tedious and manual process of adding repetitive boilerplate code.

Let’s take the Phoenix router, for example:

blog/lib/blog_web/router.ex

defmodule BlogWeb.Router do
  # ..
  pipeline :browser do
    plug :fetch_session
    plug :accepts, ["html"]
  end
  scope "/", BlogWeb do
    pipe_through [:browser]
    get "/posts", PostController, :index
  end
end
...