This document well help you get started with rescript-urql
. It picks up right where the README leaves off. It assumes you've followed the installation instructions, but nothing more.
To get started with rescript-urql
, the first thing you'll want to do is create your client. Your client is the core orchestrator of communication with your GraphQL API, handling all outgoing requests and incoming responses. To create a client, call the make
function from the Client
module.
open ReScriptUrql
let client = Client.make(~url="https://mygraphqlapi.com/graphql", ())
The client
accepts a few other configuration options, including fetchOptions
and exchanges
, but only url
is required. By default, rescript-urql
will apply urql
's defaultExchanges
if no exchanges are provided; this will include the fetchExchange
for executing requests, the cacheExchange
for caching responses from your API, and the dedupExchange
for deduplicating in-flight requests. It will also apply standard fetch options if no fetchOptions
argument is provided, using POST
as the HTTP method and application/json
as the Content-Type
header. We'll see later how to work with these options.
Once you have your Client
setup, you'll need to pass it to your Provider
, which should wrap the root level of your application. This allows rescript-urql
's hooks to access the Client
in order to execute operations lower down in your React tree.
open ReScriptUrql
let client = Client.make(~url="https://mygraphqlapi.com/graphql", ())
/* Wrap your application in Provider, passing it the client as a prop. */
@react.component
let make = () =>
<Context.Provider value=client><App /></Context.Provider>
Nice, there's only one more step to getting our GraphQL requests executing – using a hook! rescript-urql
comes with three hooks for getting access to your data – useQuery
, useMutation
, and useSubscription
. Let's check out how we might execute a query with useQuery
.
open ReScriptUrql
/* Create a module with your GraphQL query. */
module DogsQuery = %graphql(`
query dogs {
dogs {
key
name
breed
likes
}
}
`)
@react.component
let make = () => {
/* Pass the graphql-ppx module as a first-class module to useQuery. */
let ({Hooks.response: response}, executeQuery) = Hooks.useQuery(~query=(module DogsQuery), ())
/* Pattern match on the response variant.
This variant has constructors for Fetching, Data(d), PartialData(d, e) Error(e), and Empty. */
switch response {
| Fetching => <LoadingSpinner />
| Data(d)
| PartialData(d, _) => {
Array.map(dog =>
<div key=dog.key>
<span> dog.name->React.string </span>
<span> dog.breed->React.string <span>
</div>,
d.dogs
)
}
| Error(e) =>
switch e.networkError {
| Some(_e) => <div> "Network Error"->React.string </div>
| None => <div> "Other Error"->React.string </div>
}
| Empty => <div> "Something went wrong!"->React.string </div>
}
}
Sweet 😎! We've executed a query with our useQuery
hook. Notice that we didn't have to write any types to get 💯% type inference and type safety on the response. We use type information included in the query module you pass to useQuery
to ensure that you're using the data returned by your query in a fully type-safe way.
Check out the example in examples/2-query
to see a more involved example of using useQuery
.
Awesome, so we've written our first query with rescript-urql
. What about mutations?
Fortunately, writing mutations in rescript-urql
is just as easy as writing queries – just use the useMutation
hook.
open ReScriptUrql
// Create a module with your GraphQL mutation.
module LikeDogMutation = graphql(`
mutation likeDog($key: ID!) {
likeDog(key: $key) {
likes
name
breed
}
}
`)
@react.component
let make = (~key: string) => {
// Pass the request to useMutation.
let (_, executeMutation) =
Hooks.useMutation(~mutation=(module LikeDogMutation))
<button onClick={_e => executeMutation({key}) |> ignore}>
"Execute the Mutation (and Reward a Good Dog)"->React.string
</button>
}
Great – we've successfully executed a mutation to like a dog! Existing queries that reference the mutated data will be notified that data has changed, meaning you don't need to think at all about refetching your data – it's all updated for you by rescript-urql
.
useMutation
returns a two-dimensional tuple, containing (result, executeMutation)
. result
contains the response
variant, which allows you to pattern match on the API response from your mutation. For example, if you wanted to show different UI when your mutation was Fetching
, or if there was an Error
you can do something like the following:
open ReScriptUrql
@react.component
let make = (~key: string) => {
// Pass the request to useMutation.
let ({Hooks.response: response}, executeMutation)
= Hooks.useMutation(~mutation=(module LikeDogMutation))
let button = React.useMemo1(() =>
<button onClick={_e => executeMutation({key}) |> ignore}>
"Execute the Mutation (and Reward a Good Dog)"->React.string
</button>,
[executeMutation]
);
switch response {
| Fetching =>
// If the mutation is still executing, display a LoadingSpinner on top of our button.
<LoadingSpinner>
button
<LoadingSpinner>
| Data(_d) => button
// If an error is encountered when executing the mutation, show some error UI to the user.
| Error(e) =>
<MyErrorComponent message=e.message>
button
</MyErrorComponent>
| _ => React.null
}
}
Check out the example in examples/3-mutation
to see a more involved example of using useMutation
.