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Spotify web API in Haskell Build Status

Web API wrapper powered by lens and pipes, allowing easy access to public endpoints. It does not have any external dependencies nor requirements regarding app registration.

  • Paging is handled transparently using pipes
  • All data types are navigated using lenses

All public endpoints, with multi-get versions excluded, are implemented.

Example (Examples/Search.hs)

> :set -XOverloadedStrings
> :m +Control.Lens Utils.Spoty
> Just artist <- fetchOne (searchArtist "avicii")      -- assume at least one match
> popular <- getArtistTop (view spotifyID artist) "SE" -- retrieve the most popular tracks in Sweden
> mapM_ (print . view name) popular                    -- print the corresponding names
"Hey Brother"
"Addicted To You"
"Wake Me Up"
...

Design

The Utils.Spoty module provides access to all of the included endpoints, as listed in the official documentation. All of the returned objects are defined in Utils.Spoty.Types and have associated lenses. The names have been preserved to a large extent, but URIs and IDs are prefixed with spotify.

Some of the API endpoints return a (potentially long) stream of objects, e.g. when performing a search. This is handled by using pipes. Consider the following signature:

searchArtist ⩬ T.Text → P.Producer Artist IO ∅

Here the returned value is a producer of artist objects. If you don't need constant-space streaming, then you can extract the corresponding list by calling fetchAll ⩬ Monad m ⇒ P.Producer a m ∅ → m [a]. When you're only interested in the first result (e.g. when searching for a well-known artist), it's useful to call fetchOne ⩬ Monad m ⇒ P.Producer a m ∅ → m (Maybe a). In the other cases you will need functions available in the pipes package.

The distinction between full and simple objects has been implemented as details wrapped in an optional Maybe.

Finally, error handling is implemented with exceptions being thrown when HTTP or JSON decoding errors occur.