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Phoenix Web Development

You're reading from   Phoenix Web Development Create rich web applications using functional programming techniques with Phoenix and Elixir

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787284197
Length 406 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Brandon Richey Brandon Richey
Author Profile Icon Brandon Richey
Brandon Richey
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Brief Introduction to Elixir and Phoenix FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Controllers, Views, and Templates 3. Storing and Retrieving Vote Data with Ecto Pages 4. Introducing User Accounts and Sessions 5. Validations, Errors, and Tying Loose Ends 6. Live Voting with Phoenix 7. Improving Our Application and Adding Features 8. Adding Chat to Your Phoenix Application 9. Using Presence and ETS in Phoenix 10. Working with Elixir's Concurrency Model 11. Implementing OAuth in Our Application 12. Building an API and Deploying 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding the role of contexts

We talked a little bit about the sorts of issues that would lead us to want to control how our code is used and written since we don't want maintenance to become a giant hassle for us in the future. Therefore, let's instead simplify our lives by providing a single interface for related schemas and database operations.

Contexts fill that void by providing that unified interface, typically providing human-readable functions that allow the fetching, inserting, updating, and deleting of data. It can also do other database-specific operations that may be difficult to figure out ownership of (for example, should adding a new option to a poll live on the Poll or live on the schema? The correct answer is: neither!).

Overall, the end goal is that when someone else is working on our codebase (or, when we're working on this same codebase...

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