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rdbms-playground/docs/handoff/20260507-handoff-1.md
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claude@clouddev1 bfdf350ac8 Handoff doc + CLAUDE.md refresh for next session
- New docs/handoff/20260507-handoff-1.md captures session
  state, what's implemented, what's pending (ranked
  recommendations for next moves), sharp edges, and a
  smoke-test sequence.
- CLAUDE.md updated to reflect current reality: ADRs 0008-
  0014 added to the decisions-at-a-glance list, the
  "repository layout (planned)" placeholder replaced with
  the actual layout, key invariants spelled out, deferred
  list rebuilt from current requirements.md.
2026-05-07 18:07:18 +00:00

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Session handoff — 2026-05-07 (1)

This is the first handover note from the project. The session took the project from an empty repository through five feature-bearing iterations to a working DSL playground for relational database concepts. The next session should be able to pick up cleanly from CLAUDE.md + this file + the linked ADRs.

State at handoff

Branch: main. Working tree clean. Six commits on top of an empty starting tree:

305e508 INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE + value model + auto-show, with polish
1650682 Foreign-key relationships, rebuild-table, polish round
c1e5292 DSL parser, async DB worker, types, history, metadata, polish
25a0f12 TUI walking skeleton (Phase 4)
aebfc7d Add Phase 1 requirements checklist with NFRs
3a0c03d Initial planning docs: CLAUDE.md and ADRs 0000-0008

Tests: 200 passing (183 lib + 17 integration), 0 skipped. Clippy: clean with nursery lints enabled. Release build: ~5MB single binary.

The user's terminal is a real TTY; the TUI runs cleanly there but cannot be exercised from a non-TTY environment. Use the cargo test tiers for confident automated checks (Tier 4 PTY tests are configured per ADR-0008 but not yet wired with expectrl).

What's implemented

TUI shell:

  • Three-region layout: items list (left), output + input + hint (right), bottom status bar with mode-aware shortcuts.
  • Light/dark themes with --theme CLI flag and COLORFGBG auto-detect.
  • Simple/Advanced input modes; : one-shot escape with prompt reaction (border colour + label flip); auto-inserted space after a leading : in simple mode.
  • In-line cursor editing (Left/Right/Home/End/Delete/Backspace, UTF-8 boundary aware).
  • In-memory command history (Up/Down with draft preservation, consecutive-duplicate dedup).
  • PageUp/PageDown output scrolling, wrap-aware (renderer reports both visible-row count and total wrapped-row count to App).

Database (in-memory only this iteration; track 2 brings file backing):

  • SQLite via rusqlite 0.39 with STRICT tables and PRAGMA foreign_keys = ON.
  • Dedicated worker thread (ADR-0010): mpsc::Sender<Request> in / per-request oneshot reply out. App holds a Database handle (cheap to clone).
  • Internal metadata tables (ADR-0012, ADR-0013):
    • __rdbms_playground_columns(table_name, column_name, user_type) for round-tripping user-facing column types.
    • __rdbms_playground_relationships(name, parent_table, parent_column, child_table, child_column, on_delete, on_update) for named FKs.
  • Internal-table convention: prefix __rdbms_*; filtered out of list_tables. Future internal tables follow this rule.
  • DDL: create_table, add_column, drop_table, add_relationship, drop_relationship, query_data, insert, update, delete.
  • rebuild_table primitive following SQLite's ALTER-via-rebuild recipe (ADR-0013): PRAGMA foreign_keys = OFF outside tx, copy-by-name, foreign_key_check before commit, atomic metadata updates. Reusable for B2's pending column-drop/rename/type-change work.
  • FK error enrichment lists both outbound (INSERT/UPDATE relevance) and inbound (DELETE/UPDATE on parent relevance) relationships from the metadata.

DSL grammar (chumsky):

  • create table <Name> with pk [<name>:<type>[,<name>:<type>...]] — single PK or compound; with pk alone defaults to id:serial; bare create table X errors with friendly hint.
  • add column [to table] <Name>: <ColName> (<type>)to table optional (just verbose).
  • drop table <Name> — refuses if other tables still reference this one (lists the offending relationships).
  • add 1:n relationship [as <name>] from <P>.<col> to <C>.<col> [on delete <action>] [on update <action>] [--create-fk] — auto-name format <Parent>_<pcol>_to_<Child>_<ccol>. [as <name>] requires the as keyword to be unambiguous.
  • drop relationship <name> or `drop relationship from

    . to .`.

  • show table <Name> — re-renders structure.
  • show data <Name> — renders data view.
  • insert into <T> [(cols)] values (vals) and insert into <T> (vals) (short form omitting values, disambiguated by literal-vs-identifier content).
  • update <T> set <c>=<v>[,<c>=<v>...] where <c>=<v> | --all-rows.
  • delete from <T> where <c>=<v> | --all-rows.

App-level commands (always available in both modes per ADR-0003): quit/q, mode simple|advanced. The rest of the canonical list (save, load, export, etc.) lands with the features they belong to.

Type system (ADR-0005): All ten user-facing types implemented: text / int / real / decimal / bool / date / datetime / blob / serial / shortid.

  • serialINTEGER PRIMARY KEY, auto-filled by SQLite.
  • shortidTEXT, auto-generated by us (10-char base58, no ambiguous glyphs); explicit values validated against the same alphabet/length range.
  • decimal / date / datetime stored as TEXT; per-type format validation at INSERT/UPDATE time with friendly errors naming the column.
  • Type::fk_target_type() (ADR-0011): serial → int, shortid → text, others identity. Used at FK declaration to validate the FK column type.

Auto-show after writes: INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE return typed result structs (InsertResult, UpdateResult, DeleteResult). INSERT auto-shows the just-inserted row (via last_insert_rowid). UPDATE captures matching rowids up-front so the post-update display still finds the rows even if WHERE column changed. DELETE reports per-relationship cascade effects via row-count diffing of inbound child tables. UPDATE-side cascades are not detected (would need value diffing).

0000 Record architecture decisions (process)
0001 Language and TUI framework (Rust + Ratatui)
0002 Database engine (SQLite STRICT)
0003 Input modes and command dispatch
0004 Project file format (deferred — track 2)
0005 Column type vocabulary (ten types)
0006 Undo snapshots and replay log (deferred)
0007 Sharing and export (deferred — depends on track 2)
0008 Testing approach (four tiers)
0009 DSL command syntax conventions
0010 Database access via worker thread
0011 FK column type compatibility
0012 Internal metadata for user-facing column types
0013 Relationships, naming, and rebuild-table strategy
0014 Data operations, value literals, and auto-show

What's pending — proposed next moves (in order of my recommendation)

Several natural directions; ranking is my read at handoff.

1. Project storage — track 2 (highest user impact)

The largest UX friction left: every quit loses everything. The ADR-0004 design is fully in place — project.yaml + data/<table>.csv

  • history.log, with playground.db as a derived artifact.

What's needed:

  • File-backed projects: Database::open(path) already accepts any path (currently always :memory: from runtime).
  • Auto-temp project on startup, stored in ~/.rdbms-playground/projects/temp-<name> (P1).
  • save / save as (P2).
  • Auto-save on every change (P3).
  • load picker (P4).
  • playground.db rebuild from project.yaml + data/ (P5) — confirmation when .db exists.
  • YAML schema serialiser/deserialiser. The metadata tables (ADR-0012, ADR-0013) are already the source of truth.
  • CSV per-table data round-trip.
  • Persistent command history (the in-memory I2 becomes durable).
  • .gitignore template (F2) and the format-version migration framework (F3).
  • The export/import app-level commands (E1, ADR-0007).

Estimated scope: substantial — 8001500 lines + tests + ADR(s). Probably wants its own design ADR before coding.

2. Complex WHERE expressions (C5a)

The user explicitly flagged this as the bridge between DSL fluency and real SQL. AND/OR/comparison operators (<, >, !=)/LIKE/IS NULL in UPDATE/DELETE/show-data filters. Builds on the existing parser. Requires its own ADR for the expression grammar.

Estimated scope: moderate — 400600 lines + tests + ADR.

3. Indexes (C3 partial) + EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN rendering (QA1)

Indexes are conceptually simple but unlock the most powerful teaching demo we haven't done yet: showing how EXPLAIN QUERY PLAN output changes when an index is added. ADR-0008 plus the SQLite EXPLAIN docs are the relevant references.

Estimated scope: moderate — 300500 lines + tests + ADR.

4. B2 column drops/renames/type changes

The rebuild_table primitive already exists (ADR-0013). What's needed is grammar (drop column from T: c, rename column on T: old to new, change column on T: c (new_type)) and the executor wiring.

Estimated scope: moderate — 400 lines + tests.

5. Friendly error layer (H1)

Promote DbError::friendly_message() from passthrough to a real translator: rewrite SQLite's terse messages to learner- friendly ones, identify exact violating columns/rows, suggest fixes ("did you mean…").

Pairs nicely with H1a (parse-error syntax-help that points at missing keywords/clauses).

Estimated scope: moderate — 300500 lines + tests + ADR.

6. Session log + Markdown export (V4 — the bigger UX project)

The output panel as a scrollable per-session journal with inline rich rendering (smart table-vs-vertical decision based on dimensions); Markdown export of the log. Largest single piece of UX work outstanding.

Estimated scope: large — 800+ lines + tests + ADR.

7. m:n convenience command (C4)

Auto-generates a junction table from create m:n relationship from <T1> to <T2>; pulls primary keys; assigns a compound PK on the junction. Depends on relationships being solid (they are).

Estimated scope: small/moderate once the design is settled — 200400 lines + tests + ADR.

8. Smaller polish

  • Readline shortcuts I1b (Ctrl-A/Ctrl-E and friends).
  • Multi-line input I1 (Enter inserts newline, Ctrl-Enter submits).
  • Tab completion I3.
  • Syntax highlighting I4.
  • CI (TT5) — the test infrastructure exists; the workflow file does not.

Sharp edges and subtleties

Things that took thought during this session and might trip up a new agent:

  • update() is pure-sync; the runtime is async. The Elm pattern (ADR-0001 / ADR-0010) is a hard rule. Don't make update() async or do DB calls inside it; emit Actions and let the runtime dispatch.
  • Schema mutations always update metadata. Both __rdbms_playground_columns and __rdbms_playground_relationships are in transactions with the DDL they belong to. A new DDL operation that touches columns or relationships and forgets to update metadata will produce subtly wrong describe_table output later.
  • rebuild_table is the load-bearing primitive for any FK change. SQLite cannot ALTER FK constraints in place. The primitive runs PRAGMA foreign_keys = OFF outside a transaction (the pragma is a no-op inside one), then performs the swap.
  • Wrap-aware scroll math. The renderer reports both visible-row count and total wrapped-row count to App via note_output_viewport. Writing scroll-related code without understanding this will produce off-by-many bugs (the user hit one twice in this session).
  • Command::target_table vs display_subject. They differ for relationship commands: target_table() is the parent (drives the post-action description); display_subject() prints the from .. to .. form for the [ok] line.
  • Ratatui's Paragraph::line_count is unstable. We approximate via character-count division (approximate_wrapped_rows_from_output in ui.rs). Off-by- one at boundaries is acceptable for scroll capping.
  • set_default is not implemented. ADR-0014 commits to the four other actions (no action, restrict, set null, cascade). When DEFAULT constraints land (C3 partial), set default joins the family.
  • The user has expressed strong preferences several times. Reread the relevant ADRs (especially 0009 on syntax conventions; 0011 on type compatibility; 0013 on relationship naming) before making any DSL grammar change.

How to take over

  1. Read this file.
  2. Read CLAUDE.md for the working-style rules and current layout.
  3. Read docs/requirements.md for granular progress.
  4. Skim docs/adr/README.md; read any ADR you'll touch.
  5. Run cargo test to confirm the 200-test green baseline.
  6. cargo run --release to see the app in action — try the smoke test below.

End-to-end smoke test

Verifies the playground works from create-table through relationships through writes through cascade:

create table Customers with pk id:serial
add column Customers: Name (text)
create table Orders with pk id:serial
add column Orders: CustId (int)
add 1:n relationship from Customers.id to Orders.CustId on delete cascade
insert into Customers ('Alice')
insert into Customers ('Bob')
insert into Orders (CustId) values (1)
show data Customers
show data Orders
delete from Customers where id=1
show data Orders                              -- empty (cascaded)
quit

If anything in that sequence fails, something is wrong. The sequence exercises auto-PK, auto-shortid (no, wait — Customers is serial, not shortid; for shortid replace pk id:serial with pk id:shortid), FK compatibility (Customers.id is serial → Orders.CustId must be int), the rebuild-table dance when adding the relationship, the insert short form, and cascade delete.