npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

wawhal-graphiql

v0.0.2-alpha

Published

An graphical interactive in-browser GraphQL IDE.

Downloads

6

Readme

GraphiQL

/ˈɡrafək(ə)l/ A graphical interactive in-browser GraphQL IDE. Try the live demo.

Build Status CDNJS npm

Getting started

Using a node.js server? Just use express-graphql! It can automatically present GraphiQL. Using another GraphQL service? GraphiQL is pretty easy to set up. With npm:

npm install --save graphiql

Alternatively, if you are using yarn:

yarn add graphiql

GraphiQL provides a React component responsible for rendering the UI, which should be provided with a function for fetching from GraphQL, we recommend using the fetch standard API.

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import GraphiQL from 'graphiql';
import fetch from 'isomorphic-fetch';

function graphQLFetcher(graphQLParams) {
  return fetch(window.location.origin + '/graphql', {
    method: 'post',
    headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
    body: JSON.stringify(graphQLParams),
  }).then(response => response.json());
}

ReactDOM.render(<GraphiQL fetcher={graphQLFetcher} />, document.body);

Build for the web with webpack or browserify, or use the pre-bundled graphiql.js file. See the example in the git repository to see how to use the pre-bundled file.

Don't forget to include the CSS file on the page! If you're using npm or yarn, you can find it in node_modules/graphiql/graphiql.css, or you can download it from the releases page.

For an example of setting up a GraphiQL, check out the example in this repository which also includes a few useful features highlighting GraphiQL's API.

Features

  • Syntax highlighting
  • Intelligent type ahead of fields, arguments, types, and more.
  • Real-time error highlighting and reporting.
  • Automatic query completion.
  • Run and inspect query results.

Usage

GraphiQL exports a single React component which is intended to encompass the entire browser viewport. This React component renders the GraphiQL editor.

import GraphiQL from 'graphiql';

<GraphiQL />

GraphiQL supports customization in UI and behavior by accepting React props and children.

Props:

  • fetcher: a function which accepts GraphQL-HTTP parameters and returns a Promise or Observable which resolves to the GraphQL parsed JSON response.

  • schema: a GraphQLSchema instance or null if one is not to be used. If undefined is provided, GraphiQL will send an introspection query using the fetcher to produce a schema.

  • query: an optional GraphQL string to use as the initial displayed query, if undefined is provided, the stored query or defaultQuery will be used.

  • variables: an optional GraphQL string to use as the initial displayed query variables, if undefined is provided, the stored variables will be used.

  • operationName: an optional name of which GraphQL operation should be executed.

  • response: an optional JSON string to use as the initial displayed response. If not provided, no response will be initially shown. You might provide this if illustrating the result of the initial query.

  • storage: an instance of [Storage][] GraphiQL will use to persist state. Default: window.localStorage.

  • defaultQuery: an optional GraphQL string to use when no query is provided and no stored query exists from a previous session. If undefined is provided, GraphiQL will use its own default query.

  • onEditQuery: an optional function which will be called when the Query editor changes. The argument to the function will be the query string.

  • onEditVariables: an optional function which will be called when the Query variable editor changes. The argument to the function will be the variables string.

  • onEditOperationName: an optional function which will be called when the operation name to be executed changes.

  • onToggleDocs: an optional function which will be called when the docs will be toggled. The argument to the function will be a boolean whether the docs are now open or closed.

  • getDefaultFieldNames: an optional function used to provide default fields to non-leaf fields which invalidly lack a selection set. Accepts a GraphQLType instance and returns an array of field names. If not provided, a default behavior will be used.

  • editorTheme: an optional string naming a CodeMirror theme to be applied to the QueryEditor, ResultViewer, and Variables panes. Defaults to the graphiql theme. See below for full usage.

Children:

  • <GraphiQL.Logo>: Replace the GraphiQL logo with your own.

  • <GraphiQL.Toolbar>: Add a custom toolbar above GraphiQL. If not provided, a default toolbar may contain common operations. Pass the empty <GraphiQL.Toolbar /> if an empty toolbar is desired.

  • <GraphiQL.Button>: Add a button to the toolbar above GraphiQL.

  • <GraphiQL.Menu>: Add a dropdown menu to the toolbar above GraphiQL.

    • <GraphiQL.MenuItem>: Items for a menu.
  • <GraphiQL.Select>: Add a select list to the toolbar above GraphiQL.

    • <GraphiQL.SelectOption>: Options for a select list.
  • <GraphiQL.Group>: Add a group of associated controls to the toolbar above GraphiQL. Expects children to be <GraphiQL.Button>, <GraphiQL.Menu>, or <GraphiQL.Select>.

  • <GraphiQL.Footer>: Add a custom footer below GraphiQL Results.

Usage Examples

class CustomGraphiQL extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {
      // REQUIRED:
      // `fetcher` must be provided in order for GraphiQL to operate
      fetcher: this.props.fetcher,

      // OPTIONAL PARAMETERS
      // GraphQL artifacts
      query: '',
      variables: '',
      response: '',

      // GraphQL Schema
      // If `undefined` is provided, an introspection query is executed
      // using the fetcher.
      schema: undefined,

      // Useful to determine which operation to run
      // when there are multiple of them.
      operationName: null,
      storage: null,
      defaultQuery: null,

      // Custom Event Handlers
      onEditQuery: null,
      onEditVariables: null,
      onEditOperationName: null,

      // GraphiQL automatically fills in leaf nodes when the query
      // does not provide them. Change this if your GraphQL Definitions
      // should behave differently than what's defined here:
      // (https://github.com/graphql/graphiql/blob/master/src/utility/fillLeafs.js#L75)
      getDefaultFieldNames: null
    };
  }

  // Example of using the GraphiQL Component API via a toolbar button.
  handleClickPrettifyButton(event) {
    const editor = this.graphiql.getQueryEditor();
    const currentText = editor.getValue();
    const { parse, print } = require('graphql');
    const prettyText = print(parse(currentText));
    editor.setValue(prettyText);
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <GraphiQL ref={c => { this.graphiql = c; }} {...this.state}>
        <GraphiQL.Logo>
          Custom Logo
        </GraphiQL.Logo>
        <GraphiQL.Toolbar>

          // GraphiQL.Button usage
          <GraphiQL.Button
            onClick={this.handleClickPrettifyButton}
            label="Prettify"
            title="Prettify Query (Shift-Ctrl-P)"
          />

          // Some other possible toolbar items
          <GraphiQL.Menu label="File" title="File">
            <GraphiQL.MenuItem label="Save" title="Save" onSelect={...}>
          </GraphiQL.Menu>

          <OtherReactComponent someProps="true" />

        </GraphiQL.Toolbar>
        <GraphiQL.Footer>
          // Footer works the same as Toolbar
          // add items by appending child components
        </GraphiQL.Footer>
      </GraphiQL>
    );
  }
}

Applying an Editor Theme

In order to theme the editor portions of the interface, you can supply a editorTheme prop. You'll also need to load the appropriate CSS for the theme (similar to loading the CSS for this project). See the themes available here.

// In your html
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/codemirror/5.23.0/theme/solarized.css" />

// In your GraphiQL JSX
<GraphiQL
  editorTheme="solarized light"
/>

Query Samples

Query

GraphQL queries declaratively describe what data the issuer wishes to fetch from whoever is fulfilling the GraphQL query.

query FetchSomeIDQuery($someId: String!) {
  human(id: $someId) {
    name
  }
}

More examples available from: GraphQL Queries.

Mutation

Given this schema,

const schema = new GraphQLSchema({
  query: new GraphQLObjectType({
    fields: {
      numberHolder: { type: numberHolderType },
    },
    name: 'Query',
  }),
  mutation: new GraphQLObjectType({
    fields: {
      immediatelyChangeTheNumber: {
        type: numberHolderType,
        args: { newNumber: { type: GraphQLInt } },
        resolve: (function (obj, { newNumber }) {
          return obj.immediatelyChangeTheNumber(newNumber);
        })
      }
    },
    name: 'Mutation',
  })
});

then the following mutation queries are possible:

mutation TestMutation {
  first: immediatelyChangeTheNumber(newNumber: 1) {
    theNumber
  }
}

Read more in this mutation test in graphql-js.

Relay has another good example using a common pattern for composing mutations. Given the following GraphQL Type Definitions,

input IntroduceShipInput {
  factionId: ID!
  shipName: String!
  clientMutationId: String!
}

type IntroduceShipPayload {
  faction: Faction
  ship: Ship
  clientMutationId: String!
}

mutation calls are composed as such:

mutation AddBWingQuery($input: IntroduceShipInput!) {
  introduceShip(input: $input) {
    ship {
      id
      name
    }
    faction {
      name
    }
    clientMutationId
  }
}
{
  "input": {
    "shipName": "B-Wing",
    "factionId": "1",
    "clientMutationId": "abcde"
  }
}

Read more from Relay Mutation Documentation.

Fragment

Fragments allow for the reuse of common repeated selections of fields, reducing duplicated text in the document. Inline Fragments can be used directly within a selection to condition upon a type condition when querying against an interface or union. Therefore, instead of the following query:

{
  luke: human(id: "1000") {
    name
    homePlanet
  }
  leia: human(id: "1003") {
    name
    homePlanet
  }
}

using fragments, the following query is possible.

{
  luke: human(id: "1000") {
    ...HumanFragment
  }
  leia: human(id: "1003") {
    ...HumanFragment
  }
}

fragment HumanFragment on Human {
  name
  homePlanet
}

Read more from GraphQL Fragment Specification.