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82 changes: 82 additions & 0 deletions pages/docs/manual/v12.0.0/record.mdx
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -29,6 +29,88 @@ type person = {

</CodeTab>

You can also nest definitions of records.

<CodeTab labels={["ReScript", "JS Output"]}>

```res prelude
type person = {
age: int,
name: string,
notificationSettings: {
sendEmails: bool,
allowPasswordLogin: bool,
},
}

let person = {
age: 90,
name: "Test Person",
notificationSettings: {
sendEmails: true,
allowPasswordLogin: false,
},
}

```
```js
let person = {
age: 90,
name: "Test Person",
notificationSettings: {
sendEmails: true,
allowPasswordLogin: false
}
};
```

</CodeTab>

Nesting record definitions is a nice way to group records that are part of the same structure, and won't be referenced from the outside.

If you end up needing to refer to a nested record type explicitly, you should make it an explicit definition instead of a nested one. This is mainly for 2 reasons:
- The records that are automatically generated for the nested record definitions are named in a way that would require you to use escaped identifiers to reference them. The nested record at `notificationSettings` above would be named `\"person.notificationSettings"` for instance
- For the sake of clarity (and caring about your co-workers), having an explicit and named definition to look at and refer to is much easier than scanning a potentially large record definition for the nested record you're looking for

So if we in the example above ended up needing to refer to `person.notificationSettings` nested record from the outside, we should instead make it explicit, just like how we normally define records:

<CodeTab labels={["ReScript", "JS Output"]}>

```res prelude
type personNotificationSettings = {
sendEmails: bool,
allowPasswordLogin: bool,
}

type person = {
age: int,
name: string,
notificationSettings: personNotificationSettings
}

let person = {
age: 90,
name: "Test Person",
notificationSettings: {
sendEmails: true,
allowPasswordLogin: false,
},
}

```
```js
let person = {
age: 90,
name: "Test Person",
notificationSettings: {
sendEmails: true,
allowPasswordLogin: false
}
};
```

</CodeTab>

## Creation

To create a `person` record (declared above):
Expand Down