PureScript is a delightful purely-functional language that offers pragmatic and powerful tools to manage complexity and help you design, build, and refactor reliable apps of any size. This repository demonstrates the principles I apply at work every day in more than 2,000 lines of thoroughly commented code.
I’m a developer at Awake Security (and previously at CitizenNet). Both companies have large production PureScript applications that have remained reliable, understandable, and maintainable as they scale.
This repository follows the RealWorld spec to implement a Medium clone called Conduit using Halogen. It’s large enough to demonstrate real world examples (CRUD, state management, scalable architecture, type classes, components, etc.) but not so large as to be overwhelming.
The source code covers Halogen 6. This repository also covers previous versions of Halogen with the following resources:
- The PR that migrated from Halogen 5 to Halogen 6
- This application written using Halogen 5
- The PR that migrated from Halogen 4 to Halogen 5
- This application written using Halogen 4
If you have found this repository and the guide useful, please consider becoming a sponsor!
First, clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/thomashoneyman/purescript-halogen-realworld
cd purescript-halogen-realworld
You can enter a development shell with all non-JavaScript dependencies via Nix:
nix-shell
Alternately, you can install PureScript, Spago, and Zephyr manually. You can use NPM to install PureScript and Spago, and you can install the Zephyr binary from its releases page -- ensure it exists in your PATH by moving it to
usr/bin/local
.
Next, install JavaScript dependencies:
npm install
Next, build the project (this command will run spago build
; see the package.json
file to see
all helper scripts for the project):
npm run build
You can bundle the JS for production:
npm run bundle
And, once bundled, you can run a local server to use Conduit (defaults to port 8080, but if this port is already in use it will increment to 8081, etc.):
npm run serve
To run it in dev mode where saving your changes rebuilds and reloads the app, you can run the command below (which calls spago build --watch
)
npm run watch
And run the application with
npm run serve-dev
This will open your default browser at port 1234
This project is intended to give non-PureScript developers a taste of what a small application in the language looks like, and to give advanced beginners in PureScript a resource to feel comfortable building reliable applications of their own.
PureScript is a delightful language that becomes only more interesting and rewarding the more you use it and the larger your application becomes; if you haven’t yet tried it out, I encourage you to do so. Not convinced? Kris Jenkins has a lovely talk about PureScript which might change your mind.
The PureScript community is overwhelmingly warm and helpful. If you would like some help getting started, please consider joining the official Discourse and functional programming Slack (invite link). You may also want to check out:
- PureScript by Example, which will teach you PureScript from scratch and was written by the language’s creator, Phil Freeman. While the official book has not been updated for the latest version of the compiler, this link is to an up-to-date fork of the book.
- Jordan Martinez’s PureScript reference, which has a broad overview of dozens of topics in PureScript and functional programming.
- The (warning: currently in rough draft form) handbook which explains the theory & principles at work in this application in-depth, which will be useful to help take you from advanced beginner to advanced intermediate in the language.
- The official Halogen guide, which will teach you how to use the Halogen framework to write components.
PRs are welcome! Any functional changes will need to remain compliant with the RealWorld spec, and I may re-word documentation changes to fit with the voice used throughout the repository.