Welcome to Pragma, an expressive, opinionated ecosystem for building beautiful RESTful APIs with Ruby.
You can think of this as a meta-gem that pulls in the following pieces:
Additionally, it also provides default CRUD operations that leverage all of the Pragma components and will make creating new resources in your API a breeze.
Looking for a Rails integration? Check out pragma-rails!
Pragma was created with a very specific goal in mind: to make the development of JSON APIs a matter of hours, not days. In other words, Pragma is for JSON APIs what Rails is for web applications.
Here are the ground rules:
- Pragma is opinionated. With Pragma, you don't get to make a lot of choices and that's exactly why people are using it: they want to focus on the business logic of their API rather than the useless details. We understand this approach will not work in some cases and that's alright. If you need more personalization, only use a subset of Pragma (see item 2) or something else.
- Pragma is modular. Pragma is built as a set of gems (currently 6), plus some standalone tools. You can pick one or more modules and use them in your application as you see fit. Even though they are completely independent from each other, they nicely integrate and work best when used together, creating an ecosystem that will dramatically speed up your design and development process.
- Pragma is designed to be Rails-free. Just as what happens with Trailblazer, our Rails integration is decoupled from the rest of the ecosystem and all of the gems can be used without Rails. This is just a byproduct of the project's design: Pragma is built with pure Ruby. pragma-rails is the only available framework integration at the moment, but more will come!
Trailblazer and all of its companion projects are awesome. They are so awesome that Pragma is built on top of them: even though we're not using the Trailblazer gem itself yet, many of the Pragma gems are simply extensions of their Trailblazer counterparts:
- decorators are ROAR representers;
- contracts are Reform forms;
- operations are Trailblazer operations.
Trailblazer and Pragma have different (but similar) places in the Ruby world: Trailblazer is an architecture for building all kinds of web applications in an intelligent, rational way, while Pragma is an architecture for building JSON APIs. We have shamelessly taken all of the flexibility and awesomeness from the Trailblazer project and restricted it to a narrow field of work, providing tools, helpers and integrations that could never be part of Trailblazer due to their specificity.
Thank you, guys!
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'pragma'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install pragma
This gem works best if you follow the recommended structure for organizing resources:
└── api
└── v1
└── article
├── contract
│ ├── create.rb
│ └── update.rb
├── operation
│ ├── create.rb
│ ├── destroy.rb
│ ├── index.rb
│ └── update.rb
└── decorator
| ├── collection.rb
| └── instance.rb
└── policy.rb
Your modules and classes would, of course, follow the same structure: API::V1::Article::Policy
and
so on and so forth.
If you adhere to this structure, the gem will be able to locate all of your classes without any explicit configuration. This will save you a lot of time and is highly recommended.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/pragmarb/pragma.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.