StrictId.HotChocolate
1.0.1
This version of the package allows for implicit downcasts, which can result in loss of type information and type-unsafe comparisons. Upgrade to 1.1.0 or later for better type safety.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package StrictId.HotChocolate --version 1.0.1
NuGet\Install-Package StrictId.HotChocolate -Version 1.0.1
<PackageReference Include="StrictId.HotChocolate" Version="1.0.1" />
paket add StrictId.HotChocolate --version 1.0.1
#r "nuget: StrictId.HotChocolate, 1.0.1"
// Install StrictId.HotChocolate as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=StrictId.HotChocolate&version=1.0.1 // Install StrictId.HotChocolate as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=StrictId.HotChocolate&version=1.0.1
StrictId
Strongly-typed, ergonomic, compatible, fun to use identifiers for your entities
What
public class Person {
public Id<Person> Id { get; init; } // Strongly typed ID, with Ulid as the underlying type
public Id<Dog> BestFriendId { get; set; } // No confusion about what ID we are looking for here
public List<Id> Friends { get; set; } // Non-strict/non-generic version also included
}
- Strongly-typed IDs for your entities, or anything else
- Ulid as the underlying value, which can easily be converted to and from Guid, string, or byte arrays
- Ergonomic, developer-friendly usage without ceremony, boilerplate, or annoyance
- Built-in JSON conversion support for System.Text.Json
- Full support for Entity Framework Core incl. value converters and value generators, with StrictId.EFCore
- Full support for HotChocolate GraphQL incl. custom scalars for
Id<T>
andId
, with StrictId.HotChocolate - Tiny memory footprint and highly efficient
How
Recommended, but optional
In your global usings file, add the following to save yourself a few keystrokes:
global using Id = StrictId.Id;
Create
Id<Person>.NewId(); // Generate a new random ID
new Id<Person>("01HV9AF3QA4T121HCZ873M0BKK"); // Create from ULID string
new Id<Person>("018ED2A7-8EEA-2682-20C5-9F41C7402E73"); // Create from GUID string
new Id<Person>(Ulid.NewUlid()); // Create from ULID
new Id<Person>(Guid.NewGuid()); // Create from GUID
new Id<Person>(Id.NewId()); // Create from non-typed ID
Id<Person> id = Ulid.NewUlid(); // Convert implicitly from Ulid
Id<Person> id = Guid.NewGuid(); // Convert implicitly from Guid
var id = (Id<Person>)"01HV9AF3QA4T121HCZ873M0BKK"; // Cast from string
var id = (Id<Person>)Id.NewId(); // Cast from non-typed ID
Convert
var id = new Id<Person>("01HV9AF3QA4T121HCZ873M0BKK");
id.ToString(); // "01HV9AF3QA4T121HCZ873M0BKK"
id.ToUlid(); // Same as Ulid.Parse("01HV9AF3QA4T121HCZ873M0BKK");
id.ToGuid(); // Same as Guid.Parse("018ED2A7-8EEA-2682-20C5-9F41C7402E73");
id.ToByteArray(); // byte[]
id.IdValue // Id("018ED2A7-8EEA-2682-20C5-9F41C7402E73")
With Entity Framework Core
Install StrictId.EFCore via NuGet
In your DbContext:
using StrictId.EFCore;
public class MyDatabase (DbContextOptions<MyDatabase> options) : DbContext(options)
{
protected override void ConfigureConventions (ModelConfigurationBuilder builder)
{
// ...
builder.ConfigureStrictId();
}
}
To generate values:
using StrictId.EFCore;
// ...
builder.Property(e => e.Id)
.ValueGeneratedOnAdd()
.HasStrictIdValueGenerator();
With Hot Chocolate GraphQL
Install StrictId.HotChocolate via NuGet
On the request executor builder, configure strict IDs:
builder.Services.AddGraphQLServer()
// ...
.AddStrictId();
Scalars will be created for each strict ID, named {Type}Id
. For example, Id<Person>
would become PersonId
in the GraphQL schema.
Why
- Using Guid or Ulid as the type for IDs can easily lead to mixing up method arguments and assignments
- Other similar packages are cumbersome, non-compatible, and frankly annoying
- Ulid as the underlying type provides neat benefits over simple Guids, as they are ordered, making databases less fragmented, and look nicer as strings
Acknowledgements
- Ulid - Library for ULID in C#, used for much of the underlying functionality
- StronglyTypedId - For doing this first, but in a much more convoluted, non-ergonomic, less compatible way
License
MIT
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net8.0 is compatible. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net8.0
- HotChocolate (>= 13.9.0)
- StrictId (>= 1.0.1)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.