Overview: template structure¶
This page covers what a template looks like: what parts of a template there are, and where they go.
For the structure of a Daml file outside a template, see Reference: Daml file structure.
Template outline structure¶
Here’s the structure of a Daml template:
template NameOfTemplate
  with
    exampleParty : Party
    exampleParty2 : Party
    exampleParty3 : Party
    exampleParameter : Text
    -- more parameters here
  where
    signatory exampleParty
    observer exampleParty2
    agreement
      -- some text
      ""
    ensure
      -- boolean condition
      True
    key (exampleParty, exampleParameter) : (Party, Text)
    maintainer (exampleFunction key)
    -- a choice goes here; see next section
- template name
- templatekeyword
- parameters
- withfollowed by the names of parameters and their types
- template body
- wherekeyword- Can include: - template-local definitions
- letkeyword- Lets you make definitions that have access to the contract arguments and are available in the rest of the template definition. 
- signatories
- signatorykeyword- Required. The parties (see the Party type) who must consent to the creation of this contract. You won’t be able to create this contract until all of these parties have authorized it. 
- observers
- observerkeyword- Optional. Parties that aren’t signatories but who you still want to be able to see this contract. 
- an agreement
- agreementkeyword- Optional. Text that describes the agreement that this contract represents. 
- a precondition
- ensurekeyword- Only create the contract if the conditions after - ensureevaluate to true.
- a contract key
- keykeyword- Optional. Lets you specify a combination of a party and other data that uniquely identifies a contract of this template. See Contract keys. 
- maintainers
- maintainerkeyword- Required if you have specified a - key. Keys are only unique to a- maintainer. See Contract keys.
- choices
- choice NameOfChoice : ReturnType controller nameOfParty do- or - controller nameOfParty can NameOfChoice : ReturnType do- Defines choices that can be exercised. See Choice structure for what can go in a choice. 
 
Choice structure¶
Here’s the structure of a choice inside a template. There are two ways of specifying a choice:
- start with the choicekeyword
- start with the controllerkeyword
-- option 1 for specifying choices: choice name first
choice NameOfChoice :
      () -- replace () with the actual return type
    with
    party : Party -- parameters here
  controller party
    do
      return () -- replace this line with the choice body
-- option 2 for specifying choices: controller first
controller exampleParty can
  NameOfAnotherChoice :
      () -- replace () with the actual return type
    with
      party : Party -- parameters here
    do
      return () -- replace the line with the choice body
- a controller (or controllers)
- controllerkeyword- Who can exercise the choice. 
- choice observers
- observerkeyword- Optional. Additional parties that are guaranteed to be informed of an exercise of the choice. - To specify choice observers, you must start you choice with the - choicekeyword.- The optional - observerkeyword must precede the mandatory- controllerkeyword.
- consumption annotation
- Optionally one of preconsuming,postconsuming,nonconsuming, which changes the behavior of the choice with respect to privacy and if and when the contract is archived. See contract consumption in choices for more details.
- a name
- Must begin with a capital letter. Must be unique - choices in different templates can’t have the same name.
- a return type
- after a :, the return type of the choice
- choice arguments
- withkeyword- If you start your choice with - choiceand include a- Partyas a parameter, you can make that- Partythe- controllerof the choice. This is a feature called “flexible controllers”, and it means you don’t have to specify the controller when you create the contract - you can specify it when you exercise the choice. To exercise a choice, the party needs to be a signatory or an observer of the contract and must be explicitly declared as such.
- a choice body
- After - dokeyword- What happens when someone exercises the choice. A choice body can contain update statements: see Choice body structure below. 
Choice body structure¶
A choice body contains Update expressions, wrapped in a do block.
The update expressions are:
- create
- Create a new contract of this template. - create NameOfContract with contractArgument1 = value1; contractArgument2 = value2; ...
- exercise
- Exercise a choice on a particular contract. - exercise idOfContract NameOfChoiceOnContract with choiceArgument1 = value1; choiceArgument2 = value 2; ...
- fetch
- Fetch a contract using its ID. Often used with assert to check conditions on the contract’s content. - fetchedContract <- fetch IdOfContract
- fetchByKey
- Like - fetch, but uses a contract key rather than an ID.- fetchedContract <- fetchByKey @ContractType contractKey
- lookupByKey
- Confirm that a contract with the given contract key exists. - fetchedContractId <- lookupByKey @ContractType contractKey
- abort
- Stop execution of the choice, fail the update. - if False then abort
- assert
- Fail the update unless the condition is true. Usually used to limit the arguments that can be supplied to a contract choice. - assert (amount > 0)
- getTime
- Gets the ledger time. Usually used to restrict when a choice can be exercised. - currentTime <- getTime
- return
- Explicitly return a value. By default, a choice returns the result of its last update expression. This means you only need to use - returnif you want to return something else.- return ContractID ExampleTemplate
The choice body can also contain:
- let keyword
- Used to assign values or functions.
- assign a value to the result of an update statement
- For example: contractFetched <- fetch someContractId