--- title: GraphQL Haskell Tutorial --- == Getting started == Welcome to GraphQL! We have written a small tutorial to help you (and ourselves) understand the graphql package. Since this file is a literate haskell file, we start by importing some dependencies. > {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} > module Main where > > import Control.Monad.IO.Class (liftIO) > import Data.Aeson (encode) > import Data.ByteString.Lazy.Char8 (putStrLn) > import qualified Data.HashMap.Strict as HashMap > import Data.Text (Text) > import qualified Data.Text as Text > import Data.Time (getCurrentTime) > > import Language.GraphQL > import Language.GraphQL.Type > import qualified Language.GraphQL.Type.Out as Out > > import Prelude hiding (putStrLn) === First example === Now, as our first example, we are going to look at the example from [graphql.js](https://github.com/graphql/graphql-js). First we build a GraphQL schema. > schema1 :: Schema IO > schema1 = Schema > { query = queryType , mutation = Nothing , subscription = Nothing } > > queryType :: ObjectType IO > queryType = ObjectType "Query" Nothing [] > $ HashMap.singleton "hello" > $ ValueResolver helloField hello > > helloField :: Field IO > helloField = Field Nothing (Out.NamedScalarType string) mempty > > hello :: Resolve IO > hello = pure $ String "it's me" This defines a simple schema with one type and one field, that resolves to a fixed value. Next we define our query. > query1 :: Text > query1 = "{ hello }" To run the query, we call the `graphql` with the schema and the query. > main1 :: IO () > main1 = graphql schema1 query1 > >>= either (const $ pure ()) (putStrLn . encode) This runs the query by fetching the one field defined, returning ```{"data" : {"hello":"it's me"}}``` === Monadic actions === For this example, we're going to be using time. > schema2 :: Schema IO > schema2 = Schema > { query = queryType2, mutation = Nothing, subscription = Nothing } > > queryType2 :: ObjectType IO > queryType2 = ObjectType "Query" Nothing [] > $ HashMap.singleton "time" > $ ValueResolver timeField time > > timeField :: Field IO > timeField = Field Nothing (Out.NamedScalarType string) mempty > > time :: Resolve IO > time = do > t <- liftIO getCurrentTime > pure $ String $ Text.pack $ show t This defines a simple schema with one type and one field, which resolves to the current time. Next we define our query. > query2 :: Text > query2 = "{ time }" > > main2 :: IO () > main2 = graphql schema2 query2 > >>= either (const $ pure ()) (putStrLn . encode) This runs the query, returning the current time ```{"data": {"time":"2016-03-08 23:28:14.546899 UTC"}}``` === Combining resolvers === Now that we have two resolvers, we can define a schema which uses them both. > schema3 :: Schema IO > schema3 = Schema > { query = queryType3, mutation = Nothing, subscription = Nothing } > > queryType3 :: ObjectType IO > queryType3 = ObjectType "Query" Nothing [] $ HashMap.fromList > [ ("hello", ValueResolver helloField hello) > , ("time", ValueResolver timeField time) > ] > > query3 :: Text > query3 = "query timeAndHello { time hello }" > > main3 :: IO () > main3 = graphql schema3 query3 > >>= either (const $ pure ()) (putStrLn . encode) This queries for both time and hello, returning ```{ "data": {"hello":"it's me","time":"2016-03-08 23:29:11.62108 UTC"}}``` Notice that we can name our queries, as we did with `timeAndHello`. Since we have only been using single queries, we can use the shorthand `{ time hello }`, as we have been doing in the previous examples. In GraphQL there can only be one operation per query. == Further examples == More examples on queries and a more complex schema can be found in the test directory, in the [Test.StarWars](../../tests/Test/StarWars) module. This includes a more complex schema, and more complex queries. > main :: IO () > main = main1 >> main2 >> main3