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Docs / Language Manual / Record
Edit

Record

Records are like JavaScript objects but:

  • are immutable by default

  • have fixed fields (not extensible)

Type Declaration

A record needs a mandatory type declaration:

ReScriptJS Output
type person = {
  age: int,
  name: string
}

Creation

To create a person record (declared above):

ReScriptJS Output
let me = {
  age: 5,
  name: "Big ReScript"
}

When you create a new record value, ReScript tries to find a record type declaration that conforms to the shape of the value. So the me value here is inferred as of type person.

The type is found by looking above the me value. Note: if the type instead resides in another file or module, you need to explicitly indicate which file or module it is:

ReScriptJS Output
// School.res
type person = {age: int, name: string}
ReScriptJS Output
// Example.res

let me: School.person = {age: 20, name: "Big ReScript"}
/* or */
let me2 = {School.age: 20, name: "Big ReScript"}

Either of the above 3 says "this record's definition is found in the School file". The first one, the regular type annotation, is preferred.

Access

Use the familiar dot notation:

ReScriptJS Output
let name = me.name

Immutable Update

New records can be created from old records with the ... spread operator. The original record isn't mutated.

ReScriptJS Output
let meNextYear = {...me, age: me.age + 1}

Note: spread cannot add new fields to the record value, as a record's shape is fixed by its type.

Mutable Update

Record fields can optionally be mutable. This allows you to efficiently update those fields in-place with the = operator.

ReScriptJS Output
type person = {
  name: string,
  mutable age: int
}

let baby = {name: "Baby ReScript", age: 5}
baby.age = baby.age + 1 // `baby.age` is now 6. Happy birthday!

Fields not marked with mutable in the type declaration cannot be mutated.

JavaScript Output

ReScript records compile to straightforward JavaScript objects; see the various JS output tabs above.

Tips & Tricks

Record Types Are Found By Field Name. With records, you cannot say "I'd like this function to take any record type, as long as they have the field age". The following won't work as intended:

ReScriptJS Output
type person = {age: int, name: string}
type monster = {age: int, hasTentacles: bool}

let getAge = (entity) => entity.age

Instead, getAge will infer that the parameter entity must be of type monster, the closest record type with the field age. The following code's last line fails:

RES
let kraken = {age: 9999, hasTentacles: true} let me = {age: 5, name: "Baby ReScript"} getAge(kraken) getAge(me) // type error!

The type system will complain that me is a person, and that getAge only works on monster. If you need such capability, use ReScript objects, described here.

Design Decisions

After reading the constraints in the previous sections, and if you're coming from a dynamic language background, you might be wondering why one would bother with record in the first place instead of straight using object, since the former needs explicit typing and doesn't allow different records with the same field name to be passed to the same function, etc.

  1. The truth is that most of the times in your app, your data's shape is actually fixed, and if it's not, it can potentially be better represented as a combination of variant (introduced next) + record instead.

  2. Since a record type is resolved through finding that single explicit type declaration (we call this "nominal typing"), the type error messages end up better than the counterpart ("structural typing", like for tuples). This makes refactoring easier; changing a record type's fields naturally allows the compiler to know that it's still the same record, just misused in some places. Otherwise, under structural typing, it might get hard to tell whether the definition site or the usage site is wrong.

TupleObject

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