GraphQL and Elm have very similar type systems!
With this library you can write GraphQL queries and mutations directly and receive nice Elm code for you to use them.
This saves a ton of time! And maintains that lovely typesafety you're probably used to in Elm.
- GraphQL itself is relatively easy to write once you get the hang of it.
elm-gql
verifies everything you've written against the GraphQL schema, so you don't have to worry about writing an incorrect query or mutation.elm-gql
has nice, elm-esque error messages.
This library has been in use at vendr.com for over a year in production! We've built a number of complex app features using it and generally enjoy working with it.
npm install elm-gql --save-dev
Once you have elm-gql
installed, you'll need to get set up by requesting the GraphQL schema for the API you care about.
# Start your project by running init
elm-gql init https://api.github.com/graphql --header "Authorization: bearer TOKEN"
This will do a few things!
-
Any
*.gql
files in your project will be checked against the schema. You'll either get a nice error message describing what needs to be adjusted in the file, or it'll generate some Elm code for you to use to make that query/mutation in Elm. -
Generate some helper code under in a folder called
Api
. (Note, you can change this base name by passing--namespace MyApi
to theelm-gql
command). These files will:- Help you construct inputs to your query
- Allow you to reference any Enums in your GraphQL.
When you make a change to a query or mutation, just run
elm-gql run ./api/Api/schema.json
and everything will be checked and generated again.
If you have any further questions or feedback, there is both
- The #graphql channel in the Elm slack which is for people who are getting started with
elm-gql
or want to find people to help them debug a situation. - The #elm-gql channel in the "Incremental Elm" Discord which is where I discuss future development of
vendr/elm-gql
and coordinate with collaborators, but I'm also happy to hear about initial experiences.
See you in there π!