Skip to content

JulianNicholls/GraphQL-Bootcamp

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

GraphQL-Bootcamp

Code from the GraphQL Bootcamp by Andrew Mead on Udemy

Progress

Completed Section 9 - Testing

Query examples for reference

These are query and mutation examples to remember the syntax when it's more than just a simple query or mutation.

Name your queries in the GraphQL playground

If you name your queries, mutations and subscriptions, then you can have multiple ones in each tab and pressing the go button will show a list of actions to run. e.g.

query Users {
  users {
    id
    name
    email
    age
    posts { title }
    comments { text }
  }
}

mutation NewPost {
  createPost(
    data: {
      title: "A new hope"
      body: "Battle among the stars"
      published: true
      author: "10"
    }
  ) {
    id
    title
    body
    author { name }
  }
}

mutation DeleteUser {
  deleteUser(id: "10") {
    id
    name
  }
}

mutation updateUser {
  deleteUser(id: "10", data: { email: 'newjulian@example.com }) {
    id
    name
    email
  }
}

Fragments and Named Results

{
  first: company(id: "1") {   /* named result */
    ...companyDetails
  }

  company(id: "2") {
    ...companyDetails
  }
}

mutation {
  addCompany(name: "Woolworth") {
    ...companyDetails
  }
}

fragment companyDetails on Company {
  id, name, description
}

Parameterised Queries and Mutations

query Song($id: ID!) {
  song(id: $id) {
    id, title
  }
}

mutation AddSong($title: String!) {
  addSong(title: $title) {
    id
  }
}

Differences from Andrew

  • Obviously, I am using git from the very beginning 😀

  • I have installed ESLint in each project. My preferences are semicolons and single-quotes YMMV 😀

  • I have kept the basics files, startable with npm run start-basics.

  • I use arrow functions almost exclusively.

  • I destructure much more and don't declare redundant arguments, so this:

Post: {
  author: (parent, args, context, info) => USERS.find((user) => parent.author === user.id),
},

becomes this

Post: {
  author: ({ author }) => USERS.find(({ id }) => author === id),
},

at least in the early stages.

  • I have implemented many of the suggested tests, and some of mine are subtly different, e.g. my comment and post subscriptions do an update rather than a delete, so that the ID can be checked as part of the subscription callback.

Git client

I have used Git at the command-line for more than 10 years. Over that time, I have tried many different graphical shells for Git, without finding one that was easier and nicer to use than the command-line (in my view).

I have now found that GitKraken is an excellent Git shell and would advise using it to everyone.

Questions

If you have any questions about this repository, or any others of mine, please don't hesitate to contact me.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages