Skip to content

Lightweight and dependency free GraphQL client.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

SergeyVolynkin/simple-gql

 
 

Repository files navigation

Simple-Gql

Lightweight GraphQL wrapper around fetch. Can also be used in Node by providing your own implementation of fetch.

Built to be used for minimal use cases or in conjunction with any Promise based data-fetching abstraction such as react-query.

Features

  • Lightweight. No dependencies.
  • Written in TypeScript.
  • Functional API.
  • Supports plain string queries or ASTNodes from graphql-tag.

Installation

# npm
npm install simple-gql

# yarn
yarn add simple-gql

Usage

Plain request with JavaScript

import { fetchGql } from 'simple-gql'

const query = `
  query getBook($title: String!) {
    Book(title: $title) {
      publishDate
      author {
        name
      }
    }
  }
`

const response = await fetchGql({
  url: 'https://book-api/graphql',
  query,
  variables: { title: 'Example Title' },
})

Using graphql-tag and TypeScript

import { fetchGql } from 'simple-gql'
import gql from 'graphql-tag'

interface QueryVaraibles {
  title: string
}
interface QueryData {
  Book: {
    publishDate: number
    author: {
      name: string
    }
  }
}

const query = gql`
  query getBook($title: String!) {
    Book(title: $title) {
      publishDate
      author {
        name
      }
    }
  }
`

const response = await fetchGql<QueryData, QueryVariables>({
  url: 'https://book-api/graphql',
  query,
  variables: { title: 'Example Title' },
})

Creating a re-useable client with TypeScript

We can create a re-usable client with some function composition and closures. See the example below for a TypeScript example.

import { fetchGql } from 'simple-gql'

export const gqlRequest = async <ReturnType, Variables>(
  query: Parameters<typeof fetchGql>[0]['query']
  variables: Variables,
) => {
  // Perform any pre-request logic you need here.
  const accessToken = myTokenLogic()

  const response = await fetchGql<ReturnType, Variables>({
    query,
    variables,
    url: 'https://your-endpoint.com/graphql',
    options: {
      // Your default options.
      headers: {
        Authorization: `token ${accessToken}`,
      },
    },
  })

  return response
}

Error handling

This library will make no attempt to handle your errors and leaves it up to the developer to handle them. It will throw any error it receives, just like a fetch request would.

API

fetchGql

Make a plain GraphQL request.

const fetchGql: <T>({ url: string, query: string | ASTNode, variables?: object, options?: Options, }) => Promise<T>

Accepts an object as a parameter with the following keys:

  • url: The endpoint to request.
  • query: GraphQL query as a string or ASTNode returned from graphql-tag.
  • variables: GraphQL variable object to inject into your query.
  • options: Options. See options for additional information.

Returns a Promise.

Options

fetchGql takes an options object that accepts the same options a normal fetch would accept in addition to the following:

  • fetch: Fetch implementation to utilize. Defaults to window.fetch. Use this if you plan to use this server-side/in Node.

If you need to send your GraphQL request via GET, just set the appropriate headers.method option. fetchGql will handle setting your query and variables as querystring parameters.

License

MIT.

About

Lightweight and dependency free GraphQL client.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 91.1%
  • JavaScript 8.9%