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GraphQL Queries

For each entity you define there will be two query fields - one for fetching a single record by a unique field and one for fetching a list of records.

For following entity:

import { SchemaDefinition as def } from '@contember/schema-definition'
export class Post {
title = def.stringColumn().notNull()
publishedAt = def.dateTimeColumn()
}

GraphQL schema will be similar to this:

query {
getPost(by: PostUniqueWhere!): Post
listPost(filter: PostWhere, orderBy: [PostOrderBy!], offset: Int, limit: Int): [Post]
}
input PostUniqueWhere {
id: UUID
}
input PostOrderBy {
id: OrderDirection
publishedAt: OrderDirection
}
input PostWhere {
id: UUIDCondition
publishedAt: DateTimeCondition
and: [PostWhere!]
or: [PostWhere!]
not: PostWhere
}
enum OrderDirection {
asc
desc
}

(some types are omitted in the example)

Fetching a single record#

If you know a field, which uniquely identifies a record, you can fetch a single record using a "get" query. If you define an entity called Post, there will be a field getPost with a parameter by.

query {
getPost(by: {id: "c4ae3a0f-d91b-42a8-ad3c-5ca6b9f407c2"}) {
title
publishedAt
}
}

Fetching a list of records#

This kind of query offers more possibilities like filtering using complex conditions, ordering the result or paging using limit and offset.

query {
listPost(
filter: {publishedAt: {lte: "2019-12-20"}, category: {name: {eq: "Graphql"}}}
orderBy: [{publishedAt: asc}]
limit: 10
) {
title
publishedAt
}
}

Filters#

filter argument allows you to apply a filter on the result. On each ordinary column (which is not a relation) you can set following conditions:

input StringCondition {
and: [StringCondition!]
or: [StringCondition!]
not: StringCondition
eq: String
isNull: Boolean
notEq: String
in: [String!]
notIn: [String!]
lt: String
lte: String
gt: String
gte: String
}

It is not possible to combine multiple fields in a single object. You have to wrap using and or or fields. For example, you want to select posts published in a range, then you create following condition:

query {
listPost(
filter: {
publishedAt: {
and: [
{gte: "2019-12-20"},
{lte: "2019-12-30"}
]
}
}
) {
id
title
}
}

You can also filter over relations (both "has one" and "has many"), for example you want to only select posts written by "John Doe" and published with a "graphql" tag

query {
listPost(
filter: {
author: {name: {eq: "John Doe"}}
tag: {caption: {eq: "graphql"}}
}
) {
id
title
}
}

Sorting result#

Result set can be sorted by setting an orderBy argument. This argument can contain multiple sort fields and can also contain relations.

query {
listPost(orderBy: [
{author: {name: asc}},
{publishedAt: desc}
]) {
id
title
}
}

Records pagination#

There is an alternative to a list queries with a similar structure - a "paginate" queries. This query aims to be Relay compatible in the future.

In addition to fields for fetching a list of records, there is a pageInfo object with totalCount field. Using this value you can calculate total number of pages etc.

query {
paginatePost(
skip: 1,
first: 2,
filter: {author: {name: {eq: "John Doe"}}},
orderBy: [{publishedAt: asc}]
) {
pageInfo {
totalCount
}
edges {
node {
id
title
author {
name
}
}
}
}
}

Syntax for filtering and sorting is the same you know from "list" query. Parameters for pagination (skip, first) follows Relay specification.

Cursor based pagination is currently not possible.

Nested objects#

In a single query you can traverse across all the relations of given record.

query {
listPost {
id
title
category {
name
}
author {
name
}
}
}

on "has many" relations, you can also set a filter, orderBy and limit with an offset.

Transactions#

A transaction is NOT automatically started for queries. This results in a better performance, but it may cause an inconsistency in a result.

To enable transactions, wrap queries into a transaction field:

query {
transaction {
listPost {
title
}
listAuthor {
name
}
}
}