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Extending HoneySQL

Out of the box, HoneySQL supports most standard ANSI SQL clauses and expressions but where it doesn't support something you need you can add new clauses, new operators, and new "functions" (or "special syntax").

There are three extension points in honey.sql that let you register formatters or behavior corresponding to clauses, operators, and functions.

Built in clauses include: :select, :from, :where and many more. Built in operators include: :=, :+, :mod. Built in functions (special syntax) include: :array, :case, :cast, :inline, :raw and many more.

Registering a New Clause Formatter

honey.sql/register-clause! accepts a keyword (or a symbol) that should be treated as a new clause in a SQL statement, a "formatter", and a keyword (or a symbol) that identifies an existing clause that this new one should be ordered before.

The formatter can either be a function of two arguments or a previously registered clause (so that you can easily reuse formatters).

The formatter function will be called with:

  • The clause name (always as a keyword),
  • The sequence of arguments provided.

The third argument to register-clause! allows you to insert your new clause formatter so that clauses are formatted in the correct order for your SQL dialect. For example, :select comes before :from which comes before :where. You can call clause-order to see what the current ordering of clauses is.

Note: if you call register-clause! more than once for the same clause, the last call "wins". This allows you to correct an incorrect clause order insertion by simply calling register-clause! again with a different third argument.

Registering a New Operator

honey.sql/register-op! accepts a keyword (or a symbol) that should be treated as a new infix operator.

By default, operators are treated as strictly binary -- accepting just two arguments -- and an exception will be thrown if they are provided less than two or more than two arguments. You can optionally specify that an operator can take any number of arguments with :variadic true:

(sql/register-op! :<=> :variadic true)
;; and then use the new operator:
(sql/format {:select [:*], :from [:table], :where [:<=> 13 :x 42]})
;; will produce:
;;=> ["SELECT * FROM table WHERE ? <=> x <=> ?" 13 42]

If you are building expressions programmatically, you may want your new operator to ignore "empty" expressions, i.e., where your expression-building code might produce nil. The built-in operators :and and :or ignore such nil expressions. You can specify :ignore-nil true to achieve that:

(sql/register-op! :<=> :variadic true :ignore-nil true)
;; and then use the new operator:
(sql/format {:select [:*], :from [:table], :where [:<=> nil :x 42]})
;; will produce:
;;=> ["SELECT * FROM table WHERE x <=> ?" 42]

Registering a New Function (Special Syntax)

honey.sql/register-fn! accepts a keyword (or a symbol) that should be treated as new syntax (as a function call), and a "formatter". The formatter can either be a function of two arguments or a previously registered "function" (so that you can easily reuse formatters).

The formatter function will be called with:

  • The function name (always as a keyword),
  • The sequence of arguments provided.

For example:

(sql/register-fn! :foo (fn [f args] ..))

(sql/format {:select [:*], :from [:table], :where [:foo 1 2 3]})

Your formatter function will be called with :foo and (1 2 3). It should return a vector containing a SQL string followed by any parameters:

(sql/register-fn! :foo (fn [f args] ["FOO(?)" (first args)]))

(sql/format {:select [:*], :from [:table], :where [:foo 1 2 3]})
;; produces:
;;=> ["SELECT * FROM table WHERE FOO(?)" 1]

In practice, it is likely that your formatter would call sql/sql-kw on the function name to produce a SQL representation of it and would call sql/format-expr on each argument:

(defn- foo-formatter [f [x]]
  (let [[sql & params] (sql/format-expr x)]
    (into [(str (sql/sql-kw f) "(" sql ")")] params)))

(sql/register-fn! :foo foo-formatter)

(sql/format {:select [:*], :from [:table], :where [:foo [:+ :a 1]]})
;; produces:
;;=> ["SELECT * FROM table WHERE FOO(a + ?)" 1]

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