# Getting Started With AshMoney ## Bring in the ash_graphql dependency ```elixir def deps() [ ... {:ash_money, "~> 0.1.2"} ] end ``` ## Setup The primary thing that AshMoney provides is `AshMoney.Types.Money`. This is backed by `ex_money`. You can use it out of the box like so: ```elixir attribute :balance, AshMoney.Types.Money ``` Or you can add it to your compile time list of types for easier reference: ```elixir config :ash, :custom_types, money: AshMoney.Types.Money ``` Then compile ash again, `mix deps.compile ash --force`, and refer to it like so: ```elixir attribute :balance, :money ``` ## AshPostgres Support Add the `:ex_money_sql` dependency to your `mix.exs` file. Thanks to `ex_money_sql`, there are excellent tools for lowering support for money into your postgres database. This allows for things like aggregates that sum amounts, and referencing money in expressions: ```elixir sum :sum_of_usd_balances, :accounts, :balance do filter expr( fragment("(?).currency_code", balance) == "USD" ) end ``` To install it, add `AshMoney.AshPostgresExtension` to your list of `installed_extensions` in your repo, and generate migrations. ```elixir defmodule YourRepo do def installed_extensions do [..., AshMoney.AshPostgresExtension] end end ``` ## AshGraphql Support Add the following to your schema file: ```elixir object :money do field(:amount, non_null(:decimal)) field(:currency, non_null(:string)) end ``` ## Limitations Support for using built in operators with data layers that don't support it. For example, `expr(money + money)` will work in `AshPostgres`, but not when using `Ash.DataLayer.Ets`. We need to make built in functions extensible by type to make this work.