8.9 KiB
Building a 150 KB web blog in V with 0 dependencies
Hello,
In this guide, we'll build a simple web blog in V.
The benefits of using V for web:
- A safe, fast, language with the development agility of Python or Ruby and the performance of C.
- Zero dependencies: everything you need for web development comes with the language in a 1 MB package.
- Very small resulting binaries: the blog we'll create in this tutorial is about 150 KB.
- Easy deployments: a single binary file that even includes the precompiled templates.
- Runs on the cheapest hardware with minimum footprint: for most apps a $3 instance is enough.
- Fast development without any boilerplate.
Please note that V and Vweb are at a very early stage and are changing rapidly.
The code is available here.
Installing V
wget https://github.com/vlang/v/releases/latest/download/v_linux.zip
unzip v_linux.zip
cd v
sudo ./v symlink
Now V should be globally available on your system.
On macOS use
v_macos.zip
, on Windows -v_windows.zip
. If you use a BSD system, Solaris, Android, or simply want to install V from source, follow the simple instructions here: https://github.com/vlang/v#installing-v-from-source
Creating a new Vweb project
V projects can be created anywhere and don't need to have a certain structure:
mkdir blog
cd blog
touch blog.v
First, let's create a simple hello world website:
// blog.v
module main
import vweb
struct App {
pub mut:
vweb vweb.Context
}
fn main() {
vweb.run<App>(8081)
}
pub fn (mut app App) index() vweb.Result {
app.vweb.text('Hello, world from vweb!')
return vweb.Result{}
}
pub fn (app &App) init() {}
pub fn (app &App) init_once() {}
Run it with
v run blog.v
Running a Vweb app on http://localhost:8081 ...
Vweb helpfully provided a link, open http://localhost:8081/ in your browser:
The App
struct is an entry point of our web application. If you have experience
with an MVC web framework, you can think of it as a controller. (Vweb is
not an MVC framework however.)
As you can see, there are no routing rules. The index()
action handles the /
request by default.
Vweb often uses convention over configuration and adding a new action requires
no routing rules either:
import vweb
fn (mut app App) time() vweb.Result {
app.vweb.text(time.now().format())
return vweb.Result{}
}
You have to rebuild and restart the website every time you change the code. In the future, Vweb will detect changes and recompile the website in the background while it's running.
The .text(string)
method returns a plain text document with the provided
text, which isn't frequently used in websites.
HTML View
Let's return an HTML view instead. Create index.html
in the same directory:
<html>
<head>
<title>V Blog</title>
</head>
<body>
<b>@message</b>
<br>
<img src='https://vlang.io/img/v-logo.png' width=100>
</body>
</html>
and update our index()
action so that it returns the HTML view we just created:
pub fn (mut app App) index() vweb.Result {
message := 'Hello, world from Vweb!'
return $vweb.html()
}
Good, now we have an actual HTML page.
The V template language is similar to C#'s Razor: @message
prints the value
of message
.
You may notice something unusual: the message
variable created in the index()
action is automatically available in the view.
It's another feature of Vweb to reduce the boilerplate in your web apps.
No need to create view models just to pass data, or use an unsafe and untyped
alternative, like C#'s ViewBag["message"]
.
Making all action variables available in the view may seem crazy,
but V is a language with pure functions by default, and you won't be able
to modify any data from a view. <b>@foo.bar()</b>
will only work if the bar()
method
doesn't modify foo
.
The HTML template is compiled to V during the compilation of the website,
that's done by the $vweb.html()
line.
($
always means compile time actions in V.) offering the following benefits:
-
Great performance, since the templates don't need to be compiled on every request, like in almost every major web framework.
-
Easier deployment, since all your HTML templates are compiled into a single binary file together with the web application itself.
-
All errors in the templates are guaranteed to be caught during compilation.
Fetching data with V ORM
Now let's display some articles!
We'll be using V's builtin ORM and a SQLite database. (V ORM will also support MySQL, Postgre, and SQL Server soon.)
Create a SQLite file with the schema:
drop table if exists Article;
create table Article (
id integer primary key,
title text default "",
text text default ""
);
insert into Article (title, text) values (
"Hello, world!",
"V is great."
);
insert into Article (title, text) values (
"Second post.",
"Hm... what should I write about?"
);
Run the file with sqlite3 blog.db < blog.sqlite
.
Add a SQLite handle to App
:
import sqlite
import vweb
struct App {
pub mut:
vweb vweb.Context
db sqlite.DB
}
Modify the init_once()
method we created earlier to connect to a database:
pub fn (mut app App) init_once() {
db := sqlite.connect(':memory:') or { panic(err) }
db.exec('create table `Article` (id integer primary key, title text default "", text text default "")')
db.exec('insert into Article (title, text) values ("Hello, world!", "V is great.")')
db.exec('insert into Article (title, text) values ("Second post.", "Hm... what should I write about?")')
app.db = db
}
Code in the init_once()
function is run only once during app's startup, so we are going
to have one DB connection for all requests.
Create a new file article.v
:
// article.v
module main
struct Article {
id int
title string
text string
}
pub fn (app &App) find_all_articles() []Article {
return sql app.db {
select from Article
}
}
Let's fetch the articles in the index()
action:
pub fn (app &App) index() vweb.Result {
articles := app.find_all_articles()
return $vweb.html()
}
Finally, let's update our view:
<body>
@for article in articles
<div>
<b>@article.title</b> <br>
@article.text
</div>
@end
</body>
v run .
That was very simple, wasn't it?
The built-in V ORM uses a syntax very similar to SQL. The queries are built with V. For example, if we only wanted to find articles with ids between 100 and 200, we'd do:
return sql app.db {
select from Article where id >= 100 && id <= 200
}
Retrieving a single article is very simple:
pub fn (app &App) retrieve_article() ?Article {
return sql app.db {
select from Article limit 1
}
}
V ORM uses V's optionals for single values, which is very useful, since bad queries will always be handled by the developer:
article := app.retrieve_article(10) or {
app.vweb.text('Article not found')
return
}
Adding new articles
Create new.html
:
<html>
<head>
<title>V Blog</title>
</head>
<body>
<form action='/new_article' method='post'>
<input type='text' placeholder='Title' name='title'> <br>
<textarea placeholder='Text' name='text'></textarea>
<input type='submit'>
</form>
</body>
</html>
import vweb
pub fn (mut app App) new_article() vweb.Result {
title := app.vweb.form['title']
text := app.vweb.form['text']
if title == '' || text == '' {
app.vweb.text('Empty text/title')
return vweb.Result{}
}
article := Article{
title: title
text: text
}
println(article)
sql app.db {
insert article into Article
}
app.vweb.redirect('/')
return vweb.Result{}
}
Untyped
form['key']
is temporary. Very soon Vweb will accept query and form parameters via function arguments:new_article(title, text string) {
.
We need to update index.html
to add a link to the "new article" page:
<a href='/new'>New article</a>
JSON endpoints
This tutorial used the traditional server-side rendering. If you prefer to render everything on the client or need an API, creating JSON endpoints in V is very simple:
import vweb
pub fn (mut app App) articles() vweb.Result {
articles := app.find_all_articles()
app.vweb.json(json.encode(articles))
return vweb.Result{}
}
To be continued...
For an example of a more sophisticated web app written in V, check out Vorum: https://github.com/vlang/vorum