graphql-zeus-286-const-enum
v2.8.12
Published
Generate Client Libary for GraphQL Schema
Downloads
17
Readme
GraphQL Zeus creates autocomplete client library for JavaScript
or TypeScript
which provides autocompletion for strongly typed queries.
From version 2.0 Zeus ⚡⚡⚡ support mapped types !!!
Supported Languages:
- Javascript
- Browser
- NodeJS
- React Native
- TypeScript
- Browser
- NodeJS
- React Native
How it works
Given the following schema Olympus Cards
Table of contents
- How it works
- Table of contents
- License
- How to use
- Support
- Contribute
- Parsing
License
MIT
How to use
Main usage of graphql zeus should be as a CLI.
As a CLI
Installation
Install globally
$ npm i -g graphql-zeus
Of course you can install locally to a project and then use as a npm command or with npx
Usage with JavaScript
$ zeus schema.graphql ./
It will also generate corresponding out.d.ts file so you can have autocompletion,
Usage with TypeScript
$ zeus schema.graphql ./ --ts
Usage with NodeJS
$ zeus schema.graphql ./ --node
Usage with React Native
Same as browser
$ zeus schema.graphql ./
Load from URL
$ zeus https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql ./generated
With Authorization header
$ zeus https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql ./generated --header=Authorization:dsadasdASsad
Use generated client example
$ zeus https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql ./generated
Perform query with Chain
import { Chain } from './graphql-zeus';
const createCards = async () => {
const chain = Chain('https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql');
const listCardsAndDraw = await chain.query({
cardById: [
{
cardId: 'sdsd'
},
{
description: true
}
],
listCards: {
name: true,
skills: true,
attack: [
{ cardID: ['s', 'sd'] },
{
name: true
}
]
},
drawCard: {
name: true,
skills: true,
Attack: true
}
});
};
createCards();
// Result of a query
// {
// "drawCard": {
// "Attack": 83920,
// "name": "Raphaelle",
// "skills": [
// "RAIN",
// "
",
// ]
// },
// "cardById": {
// "description": "Customer"
// },
// "listCards": [
// {
// "name": "Lon",
// "skills": [
// "THUNDER"
// ],
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Christop"
// },
// {
// "name": "Theodore"
// },
// {
// "name": "Marcelle"
// }
// ]
// },
// {
// "name": "Etha",
// "skills": null,
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Naomie"
// }
// ]
// },
// {
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Kyle"
// },
// ],
// "name": "Arlene",
// "skills": [
// "FIRE",
// ]
// }
// ]
// }
Perform query with Thunder - Abstracted Fetch function
With thunder you have total control of fetch function not losing the result format the same time.
import { Thunder } from './graphql-zeus';
const createCards = async () => {
const thunder = Thunder(async (query) => {
const response = await fetch('https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql', {
body: JSON.stringify({ query }),
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json',
},
});
if (!response.ok) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
response
.text()
.then((text) => {
try {
reject(JSON.parse(text));
} catch (err) {
reject(text);
}
})
.catch(reject);
});
}
const json = await response.json();
return json.data;
});
const listCardsAndDraw = await thunder.query({
cardById: [
{
cardId: 'sdsd'
},
{
description: true
}
],
listCards: {
name: true,
skills: true,
attack: [
{ cardID: ['s', 'sd'] },
{
name: true
}
]
},
drawCard: {
name: true,
skills: true,
Attack: true
}
});
};
createCards();
// Result of a query
// {
// "drawCard": {
// "Attack": 83920,
// "name": "Raphaelle",
// "skills": [
// "RAIN",
// "THUNDER",
// ]
// },
// "cardById": {
// "description": "Customer"
// },
// "listCards": [
// {
// "name": "Lon",
// "skills": [
// "THUNDER"
// ],
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Christop"
// },
// {
// "name": "Theodore"
// },
// {
// "name": "Marcelle"
// }
// ]
// },
// {
// "name": "Etha",
// "skills": null,
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Naomie"
// }
// ]
// },
// {
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Kyle"
// },
// ],
// "name": "Arlene",
// "skills": [
// "FIRE",
// ]
// }
// ]
// }
Unions
You can use Zeus with unions:
const { drawChangeCard } = await chain.query({
drawChangeCard: {
__typename: true,
'...on EffectCard': {
effectSize: true,
name: true
},
'...on SpecialCard': {
effect: true,
name: true
}
}
});
// drawChangeCard result:
// {
// "effectSize": 195.99532210956377,
// "name": "Destinee",
// "__typename": "EffectCard"
// }
Interfaces
And interfaces.
const {nameables} = await Gql.query({
nameables: {
"__typename": true,
"name": true,
"...on CardStack": {
cards: {
Defense: true,
},
},
"...on Card": {
Attack: true,
},
},
});
// result
// {
// "nameables": [
// {
// "__typename": "EffectCard",
// "name": "Hector"
// },
// {
// "__typename": "CardStack",
// "name": "Scotty",
// "cards": [
// {
// "Defense": 1950
// },
// {
// "Defense": 76566
// },
// {
// "Defense": 64261
// }
// ]
// },
// {
// "__typename": "SpecialCard",
// "name": "Itzel"
// },
// ]
// }
Perform query with aliases
const aliasedQueryExecute = await chain.query({
listCards: {
__alias: {
atak: {
attack: [
{ cardID: ["1"] },
{
name: true,
description: true,
},
],
},
},
},
});
// RESULT
// {
// "listCards": [
// {
// "atak": {
// "attack": [
// {
// "name": "Zelma",
// "description": "Central"
// }
// ]
// }
// }
// ]
// }
So you can access properties type-safe like this
aliasedQueryExecute.listCards.map(c=>c.atak.attack)
Variables
To perform query with variables please import $
function and pass the variables to query
const test = await Gql.mutation(
{
addCard: [
{
card: $`card`,
},
{
id: true,
description: true,
name: true,
Attack: true,
skills: true,
Children: true,
Defense: true,
cardImage: {
bucket: true,
region: true,
key: true,
},
},
],
},
{
card: {
Attack: 2,
Defense: 3,
description: 'Lord of the mountains',
name: 'Golrog',
},
},
);
Gql string
Use Zeus to generate gql string
import { Zeus } from './graphql-zeus';
const createCards = async () => {
const stringGql = Zeus.query({
listCards: {
name: true,
skills: true,
Attack: true
}
});
// query{listCards{name skills Attack}}
};
createCards();
To run the example navigate to: ./example
and run
$ npm i
then run
$ npm run start
Use Api
for single queries mutations and Chain
for query chaining
JavaScript Type Casting
You can cast your response from fetch/apollo/other-lib to correct type even if you are using JavaScript:
import { Cast } from './graphql-zeus';
const myQuery = Cast.query(myLib("somegraphqlendpoint"))
Typescript SelectionSet
In TypeScript you can make type-safe selection sets to reuse them across queries
You can use Selectors on operations or ZeusSelect on concrete type. Only Selectors
make sense in JS as usage of ZeusSelect
on type is impossible without type support :)
import { ZeusSelect, Selectors, Chain, ValueTypes } from './graphql-zeus';
const chain = Chain('https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql');
const { drawCard: cardSelector } = Selectors.query({
drawCard: {
name: true,
description: true,
Attack: true,
skills: true,
Defense: true,
cardImage: {
key: true,
bucket: true
}
}
});
const cardSelector2 = ZeusSelect<ValueTypes["Card"]>()({
name: true,
description: true,
Attack: true,
skills: true,
Defense: true,
cardImage: {
key: true,
bucket: true
}
});
const queryWithSelectionSet = await chain.query({
drawCard: cardSelector,
listCards: cardSelector2,
});
Spec
Promise of type query data object is returned.
PROMISE_RETURNING_OBJECT = Chain.[OPERATION_NAME]({
...FUNCTION_FIELD_PARAMS
})(
...QUERY_OBJECT
).then ( RESPONSE_OBJECT => RESPONSE_OBJECT[OPERATION_FIELD] )
Simple function params object
FUNCTION_FIELD_PARAMS = {
KEY: VALUE
}
Query object
QUERY_OBJECT = {
...RETURN_PARAMS
}
Return params is an object containg RETURN_KEY - true if it is a scalar
, RETURN_PARAMS if type
otherwise it is a function where you pass Fiel params and type return params.
RETURN_PARAMS = {
RETURN_KEY: true,
RETURN_KEY: {
...RETURN_PARAMS
},
RETURN_FUNCTION_KEY:[
{
...FUNCTION_FIELD_PARAMS
},
{
...RETURN_PARAMS
}
]
}
Use Alias Spec
RETURN_PARAMS = {
__alias: RETURN_PARAMS
}
Access aliased operation type-safe
PROMISE_RETURNING_OBJECT[ALIAS_STRING][OPERATION_NAME]
Use In your Project to generate code
This will be rarely used, but here you are!
import { Parser,TreeToTS } from 'graphql-zeus';
const schemaFileContents = `
type Query{
hello: String!
}
schema{
query: Query
}
`
const typeScriptDefinition = TreeToTS.resolveTree(Parser.parse(schemaFileContents));
const jsDefinition = TreeToTS.javascript(Parser.parse(schemaFileContents));
Use in your project to dynamically fetch schema
This is useful when you need some schema fetched from your GraphQL endpoint
import { Utils } from 'graphql-zeus';
Utils.getFromUrl("https://faker.graphqleditor.com/a-team/olympus/graphql").then(schemaContent => {
// Use schema content here
})
Support
Join our GraphQL Editor Channel
Leave a star ;)
Contribute
For a complete guide to contributing to GraphQL Editor, see the Contribution Guide.
- Fork this repo
- Create your feature branch: git checkout -b feature-name
- Commit your changes: git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request
Parsing
Simplier approach to GraphQL parsing. Using graphql-js library and parsing AST to simplier types.