babel-plugin-transform-minify-gql-template-literals
v1.1.1
Published
A Babel plugin that minifies gql template literals
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babel-plugin-transform-minify-gql-template-literals
A Babel transform plugin that minifies gql
template literals. It should work with both Babel 6 and 7.
Rationale
When you use graphql-tag
in a project there are basically two ways to deal with GraphQL queries:
- Defining them inline using the
gql
template literal - Defining them in separate files and using the accompanied Babel loader to load queries
If you use the gql
template literal, you can optionally have Babel pre-compile the queries into AST. This increases runtime performance at the cost of larger bundle sizes and longer build times. However, if you don't want to pre-compile your queries (maybe you have a lot of them and the bundle size increase is not worth the performance gains), you've basically been out of luck.
What this plugin does is it minifies the contents of your gql
template literals so your bundle size can be kept as small as possible.
How it works
The plugin works on the raw string content only. Some other implementations have resorted to using graphql-js to parse the query, which in my opinion is just overcomplicating things.
The work on this plugin was inspired by the talk from Ivan Goncharov at GraphQL Finland 2018. The talk is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeEFjFHehnM.
Usage
- Add the project as a dependency:
yarn add --dev babel-plugin-transform-minify-gql-template-literals
- Configure Babel to use the plugin:
...
"plugins": [
"babel-plugin-transform-minify-gql-template-literals",
...
]
---
Make sure to include the plugin as early in your plugin chain as possible, otherwise Babel may transpile away your gql
template literals before this plugin gets a chance to minify them.
Example
The following query:
query GetArticles($first: Int!) {
contents(types: [Article], first: $first) {
edges {
node {
type
# We'll only need the title and the description
... on Article {
title
description
}
# And the publish date (let's use a separate fragment for that)
... PublishDate
}
}
}
}
fragment PublishDate on PublishableInterface {
publishedAt
}
Will be converted into:
query GetArticles($first:Int!){contents(types:[Article]first:$first){edges{node{type...on Article{title description}...PublishDate}}}}fragment PublishDate on PublishableInterface{publishedAt}
This reduces the query size from 427 to 192 bytes, a 55% reduction
Contributing
- Fork the repository
- Make your changes, make sure they work by running
yarn test
- Make a pull request
License
MIT