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Introduction to GraphQL

Learn about GraphQL, how it works, and how to use it. Looking for documentation on how to build a GraphQL service? There are libraries to help you implement GraphQL in many different languages. For an in-depth learning experience with practical tutorials, see How to GraphQL. Check out the free online course, Exploring GraphQL: A Query Language for APIs.

GraphQL is a query language for your API, and a server-side runtime for executing queries using a type system you define for your data. GraphQL isn't tied to any specific database or storage engine and is instead backed by your existing code and data.

A GraphQL service is created by defining types and fields on those types, then providing functions for each field on each type. For example, a GraphQL service that tells you who the logged in user is (me) as well as that user's name might look like this:

type Query {
me: User
}
type User {
id: ID
name: String
}

Along with functions for each field on each type:

function Query_me(request) {
return request.auth.user;
}
function User_name(user) {
return user.getName();
}

After a GraphQL service is running (typically at a URL on a web service), it can receive GraphQL queries to validate and execute. The service first checks a query to ensure it only refers to the types and fields defined, and then runs the provided functions to produce a result.

For example, the query:

{
me {
name
}
}

Could produce the following JSON result:

{
"me": {
"name": "Luke Skywalker"
}
}

To learn more, click Continue Reading.

Continue Reading →Queries and Mutations