1.0.2 • Published 7 months ago

megaera v1.0.2

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
7 months ago

GraphQL Megaera

Example

query IssuesQuery {
  issues(first: 100) {
    totalCount
    nodes {
      createdAt
      closedAt
      closed
      author {
        login
      }
      number
      title
      labels(first: 10) {
        totalCount
        nodes {
          name
        }
      }
      body
      comments(first: 10) {
        totalCount
        nodes {
          body
        }
      }
      repository {
        owner {
          login
        }
        name
      }
    }
    pageInfo {
      hasNextPage
      endCursor
    }
  }
  rateLimit {
    limit
    cost
    remaining
    resetAt
  }
}
type IssuesQuery = () => {
  issues: {
    totalCount: number
    nodes: Array<{
      createdAt: string
      closedAt: string | null
      closed: boolean
      author: {
        login: string
      }
      number: number
      title: string
      labels: {
        totalCount: number
        nodes: Array<{
          name: string
        }>
      }
      body: string
      comments: {
        totalCount: number
        nodes: Array<{
          body: string
        }>
      }
      repository: {
        owner: {
          login: string
        }
        name: string
      }
    }>
    pageInfo: {
      hasNextPage: boolean
      endCursor: string | null
    }
  }
  rateLimit: {
    limit: number
    cost: number
    remaining: number
    resetAt: string
  }
}

Installation

npm install megaera

Usage

megaera --schema=schema.graphql ./src/**/*.graphql

Megaera will generate TypeScript code for all queries in the specified files.

FAQ

Put your queries in .graphql files, and run megaera to generate TypeScript code from them.

Megaera will copy the query string to the generated TypeScript file, so you can import it in your TypeScript code.

import { IssuesQuery } from './query.graphql.ts'

The IssuesQuery variable is a string with the GraphQL query. You can use it directly in your code, or pass it to a function that accepts a query.

Also, IssuesQuery carries the type of the query, so you can use it to infer the return type of the query, and the types of the input variables.

type Result = ReturnType<IssuesQuery>

The type IssuesQuery can also be used independently:

import type { IssuesQuery } from './query.graphql.ts'

Megaera generates TypeScript types for queries as functions.

type UserQuery = (vars: { login?: string }) => {
  user: {
    login: string
    avatarUrl: string
    name: string
  }
}

To get the return type of a query, use the ReturnType utility type:

type Result = ReturnType<UserQuery>

The first parameter of the query function is the variables.

You can use TypeScript's Parameters utility type to get the types of the variables:

type Variables = Parameters<UserQuery>[0]

Or you can use the Variables utility type to get the types of the variables:

import { Variables } from 'megaera'

type Variables = Variables<UserQuery>

To make it easier to import queries in TypeScript projects. As well to connect generated output types with query source code.

This allows for library authors to create a function that accepts a query, and infers the return type from the query, as well as the types of the variables.

For example, wrap Octokit in a function that accepts a query and returns the result:

import { Query, Variables } from 'megaera'
import { IssuesQuery } from './query.graphql.ts'

function query<T extends Query>(query: T, variables?: Variables<T>) {
  return octokit.graphql<ReturnType<T>>(query, variables)
}

// Return type, and types of variables are inferred from the query.
const { issues } = await query(IssuesQuery, { login: 'webpod' })

Yes, Megaera fully supports fragments. Fragments are generated as separate types, and can be used independently.

query IssuesQuery($login: String) {
  issues(login: $login) {
    totalCount
    nodes {
      ...Issue
    }
  }
}

fragment Issue on Issue {
  number
  author {
    login
  }
  createdAt
  closedAt
}

The generated TypeScript code will have a type Issue that can be used independently:

import { Issue, IssuesQuery } from './query.graphql.ts'

const firstIssue: Issue = query(IssuesQuery).issues.nodes[0]

No. To simplify development of Megaera, it is only possible to extract queries from .graphql files.

But it should be possible to create plugins for webpack, rollup, or other bundlers that can extract queries from .ts files. If you are interested in this, please open an issue.

License

MIT

1.0.2

7 months ago

1.0.1

7 months ago

1.0.0

12 months ago

0.0.3

1 year ago

0.0.2

1 year ago

0.0.1

1 year ago

0.0.0

1 year ago