143 lines
No EOL
3.9 KiB
Markdown
143 lines
No EOL
3.9 KiB
Markdown
# graphql_schema
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[![Pub](https://img.shields.io/pub/v/graphql_schema.svg)](https://pub.dartlang.org/packages/graphql_schema)
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[![build status](https://travis-ci.org/angel-dart/graphql.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/angel-dart/graphql)
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An implementation of GraphQL's type system in Dart. Supports any platform where Dart runs.
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The decisions made in the design of this library were done to make the experience
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as similar to the JavaScript reference implementation as possible, and to also
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correctly implement the official specification.
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Contains functionality to build *all* GraphQL types:
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* `String`
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* `Int`
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* `Float`
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* `Boolean`
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* `GraphQLObjectType`
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* `GraphQLUnionType`
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* `GraphQLEnumType`
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* `GraphQLInputObjectType`
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* `Date` - ISO-8601 Date string, deserializes to a Dart `DateTime` object
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Of course, for a full description of GraphQL's type system, see the official
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specification:
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http://facebook.github.io/graphql/October2016/
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Mostly analogous to `graphql-js`; many names are verbatim:
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https://graphql.org/graphql-js/type/
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# Usage
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It's easy to define a schema with the
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[helper functions](#helpers):
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```dart
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final GraphQLSchema todoSchema = new GraphQLSchema(
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query: objectType('Todo', [
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field('text', graphQLString.nonNullable()),
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field('created_at', graphQLDate)
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]));
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```
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All GraphQL types are generic, in order to leverage Dart's strong typing support.
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# Serialization
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GraphQL types can `serialize` and `deserialize` input data.
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The exact implementation of this depends on the type.
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```dart
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var iso8601String = graphQLDate.serialize(new DateTime.now());
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var date = graphQLDate.deserialize(iso8601String);
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print(date.millisecondsSinceEpoch);
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```
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# Validation
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GraphQL types can `validate` input data.
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```dart
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var validation = myType.validate('@root', {...});
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if (validation.successful) {
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doSomething(validation.value);
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} else {
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print(validation.errors);
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}
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```
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# Helpers
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* `graphQLSchema` - Create a `GraphQLSchema`
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* `objectType` - Create a `GraphQLObjectType` with fields
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* `field` - Create a `GraphQLField` with a type/argument/resolver
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* `listOf` - Create a `GraphQLListType` with the provided `innerType`
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* `inputObjectType` - Creates a `GraphQLInputObjectType`
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* `inputField` - Creates a field for a `GraphQLInputObjectType`
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# Types
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All of the GraphQL scalar types are built in, as well as a `Date` type:
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* `graphQLString`
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* `graphQLId`
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* `graphQLBoolean`
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* `graphQLInt`
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* `graphQLFloat`
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* `graphQLDate`
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## Non-Nullable Types
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You can easily make a type non-nullable by calling its `nonNullable` method.
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## List Types
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Support for list types is also included. Use the `listType` helper for convenience.
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```dart
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/// A non-nullable list of non-nullable integers
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listOf(graphQLInt.nonNullable()).nonNullable();
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```
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### Input values and parameters
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Take the following GraphQL query:
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```graphql
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{
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anime {
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characters(title: "Hunter x Hunter") {
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name
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age
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}
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}
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}
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```
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The field `characters` accepts a parameter, `title`. To reproduce this in
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`package:graphql_schema`, use `GraphQLFieldInput`:
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```dart
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final GraphQLObjectType queryType = objectType('AnimeQuery', fields: [
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field('characters',
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listOf(characterType.nonNullable()),
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inputs: [
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new GraphQLFieldInput('title', graphQLString.nonNullable())
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]
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),
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]);
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final GraphQLObjectType characterType = objectType('Character', fields: [
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field('name', graphQLString),
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field('age', graphQLInt),
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]);
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```
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In the majority of cases where you use GraphQL, you will be delegate the
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actual fetching of data to a database object, or some asynchronous resolver
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function.
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`package:graphql_schema` includes this functionality in the `resolve` property,
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which is passed a context object and a `Map<String, dynamic>` of arguments.
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A hypothetical example of the above might be:
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```dart
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var field = field(
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'characters',
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graphQLString,
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resolve: (_, args) async {
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return await myDatabase.findCharacters(args['title']);
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},
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);
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``` |