A graphql ready starter kit for Angular2 using Apollo Client and Webpack. This starter kit is built to seamlessly integrate with the scaphold.io's powerful GraphQL-as-a-Service platform.
Out of the box, the application handles authentication and exhibits pagination using GraphQL connections. The template also comes packed with a few other goodies.
- Go to scaphold.io and create an account.
- Create an application and get your GraphQL API's url from the dropdown in the nav bar.
- A Scaphold app comes with a customizeable GraphQL API that you can immediately use to start building your Angular2 application.
- Each API contains a default
User
type that handles authentication necessities like password encryption out of the box. This template is built to seamlessly work with a fresh scaphold.io app.
- Setup this starter kit
# clone our repo
# Take the master repo if you want to plug your own styling framework
$ git clone https://github.com/scaphold-io/angular2-apollo-client-webpack-starter.git my-app
# The AngularMaterial branch comes preloaded with the popular angular2-material library
$ git clone -b AngularMaterial https://github.com/scaphold-io/angular2-apollo-client-webpack-starter.git my-app
# update /my-app/src/config.ts with your scaphold api url
$ cd my-app
$ vi src/config.ts
# install the dependencies with npm
$ npm install
# Your scaphold url will look something like https://api.scaphold.io/graphql/my-awesome-app-alias
# start the server
$ npm start
Your application is now hooked up to a production GraphQL API and is ready for you to build an awesome app.
Go to http://localhost:8080 to start using your API.
- Apollo Client - A powerful, easy to use GraphQL client.
- Webpack - A popular, well designed module bundler for JavaScript projects.
- ES6, and ES7 support with babel.
- Source maps for debugging.
- Development server with live reload via webpack-dev-server.
- Production builds with cache busting.
- Unit testing via karma and jasmine.
- Integration testing via protractor.
- Code coverage when tests are run.
angular2-apollo-webpack-starter/
├── src/ # Project Root
│ ├── app/ # Angular2 Application
│ │ ├── about/ # about, home, login, register all contain Angular components
│ │ ├── home/
│ │ ├── login/
│ │ ├── register/
│ │ ├── shared/ # shared contains Angular services. e.g. auth.service.ts
│ │ ├── app.component.html # Each component has a X.component.html template file
│ │ ├── app.component.scss # Component specific sass styling
│ │ ├── app.component.ts # The component controller
│ │ ├── app.component.e2e-spec.js # Protractor integration tests
│ │ ├── app.component.spec.ts # Karma unit tests
│ │ ├── app.routes.ts # Angular application router
│ │ └── client.ts/ # Apollo client initialization
│ ├── public/ # Public static assets
│ │ ├── img/
│ │ └── index.html
│ ├── style/ # Application wide sass styling
│ │ └── app.scss
│ ├── config.ts # Contains your API's url.
│ ├── main.ts # Application entry point
│ ├── polyfills.ts
│ └── vendor.ts # Update application dependencies here
├── typings/ # Contains TypeScript definitions
│ ├── globals/
│ ├── modules/
│ └── index.d.ts
├── package.json
├── karma-shim.js
├── karma-conf.js
├── protractor.conf.js
├── tsconfig.json
├── tslint.json
├── typedoc.json
├── typings.json
├── webpack.config.js
├── LICENSE
└── README.md
Apollo Client is an easy to use, framework agnostic GraphQL client library that makes it easy to integrate GraphQL with your app. In our experience it can be a little easier to work with than Relay and allows you to use non-React frameworks like Angular 2! Under the hood, Apollo Client uses the Redux state container for caching so that your queries run quickly and your data is always in sync.
Angular2 uses decorator functions to attach metadata to classes. Components use @Component, services use @Injectable, and classes that need GraphQL functionality use @Apollo. Take a look at the HomeComponent in src/home/home.component.ts
.
@Apollo({
client,
queries(context) {
return {
data: {
query: gql`
query AllUsers($first: Int, $after: String, $last: Int, $before: String) {
viewer {
allUsers(first: $first, after: $after, last: $last, before: $before) {
edges {
node {
id
username
lastLogin
createdAt
modifiedAt
}
cursor
}
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
hasPreviousPage
}
}
}
}
`,
variables: {
first: context.first,
after: context.after,
last: context.last,
before: context.before
},
forceFetch: false,
returnPartialData: true,
pollInterval: 10000
}
};
}
})
The Apollo decorator allows you to define queries and mutations and make them reactive so that your data stays up to date as properties in your component class change. @Apollo takes a single object with the keys client
, queries
, mutations
as a parameter and returns an object that maps to properties in the decorated class.
For the example above note how we have property data: any
in our HomeCompnoent class. We can access the data returned by the query defined in the @Apollo decorator via the data
property. Also note how the queries function in the parameter exposes a single context
argument. This context
points to the scope of the decorated class so that you can directly reference your component's state properties. This is extra awesome because Apollo Client automatically makes the queries defined in the @Apollo decorator reactive. This means that when properties in your class change so will your data. Apollo implements a bunch of cool tricks to make this efficient such that it only issues new API requests when needed and uses cached data in Redux for the rest.
You can find more documentation here for Apollo Client and Angular2Apollo (a native wrapper for Angular2)
Scaphold is a GraphQL-as-a-Service platform that makes it really easy to create production backends using GraphQL. Their web interface greatly simplifies the process of defining a GraphQL schema, integrations make adding other services like social authentication, stripe payments, email support, and push notifications a breeze, and the data exploration tools let you comb through your data without having to write GraphQL.
This template was created to work seamlessly with a fresh scaphold.io application and already has user registration and authentication configured for you. The HomeComponent src/home/home.component.ts
also includes and example of how you can easily implement pagination using Connections on Scaphold.
A necessary part of any application is the ability to paginate through data in arbitrarily sized pages. To do this in GraphQL, we use Connections. A Connection is a standards based approach to pagination that offers a efficient and straigh-forward pagination mechanism.
A GraphQL connection field takes 4 arguments
first
: An integer specifying the count of objects following theafter
cursor in a sequence that should be included in the response.after
: A string 'cursor'. This is an opaque identifier that points to an object in a sequence. It specifies where our page slice should start in a sequence and is used withfirst
. Results are bounds-exclusive and will start strictly after this cursor.last
: An integer specifying the count of objects precursing thebefore
cursor in a sequence that should be included in the response.before
: A string 'cursor'. This is an opaque identifier that points to an object in a sequence. It specifies where our page slice should end in a sequence and is used withlast
. Results are bounds-exclusive and will start strictly before this cursor.
Note: We advise you only use (
first
andafter
) OR (last
andbefore
) at any given time. Although you technically can use both at the same time it can lead to unexpected results. See the Cursor Connections Spec for more details.
The HomeComponent defines the following GraphQL query in the @Apollo decorator function.
query AllUsers($first: Int, $after: String, $last: Int, $before: String) {
viewer {
allUsers(first: $first, after: $after, last: $last, before: $before) {
edges {
node {
id
username
lastLogin
createdAt
modifiedAt
}
cursor
}
pageInfo {
hasNextPage
hasPreviousPage
}
}
}
}
It also binds the connection arguments to 4 properties in the HomeComponent class.
variables: {
first: context.first,
after: context.after,
last: context.last,
before: context.before
}
With this setup, we are able to immediately start paginating through our User data by changing the first
, after
, last
, and before
properties in the HomeComponent class. Apollo Client automatically handles making our query reactive and will make sure the presented data stays in sync with our class properties.
const edgeCount = this.data.viewer.allUsers.edges.length;
const afterCursor = (edgeCount > 0) ? this.data.viewer.allUsers.edges[edgeCount - 1]['cursor'] : null;
this.after = afterCursor;
this.first = this.defaultPageSize;
this.before = null;
this.last = null;
Try out different values to experiment with Cursor Connection pagination.
fork
this repoclone
your forknpm install
to install all dependencies
What you need to run this app:
node
andnpm
- We tested this template with Node (
v4.x
+) and NPM (3.x
+) but others will most likely work as well
After you have installed all dependencies you can now run the app with:
npm start
It will start a local server using webpack-dev-server
which will watch, build (in-memory), and reload for you. The port will be displayed to you as http://localhost:8080
.
- single run:
npm run build
- build files and watch for changes:
npm run watch
npm run docs
- This uses TypeDoc and understand JavaDoc style tags
- single run:
npm test
- live mode:
npm run test-watch
- single run:
npm e2e
- live mode:
npm e2e-live
Please feel free to fork this project and contribute. Send us a pull request and we'd be happy to merge :)