graphql-typescript-definitions
Generate TypeScript definition files from .graphql documents
Installation
npm install graphql-typescript-definitions --save-dev
or, with Yarn:
yarn add graphql-typescript-definitions --dev
Usage
This package will generate matching .d.ts
files for each .graphql
file you specify. It will attempt to generate the type as smartly as possible, including the re-use of interfaces for any fragment spreads used in your documents. The following types are generated:
-
A default export for the type that will be generated by a GraphQL loader (GraphQL’s DocumentNode
type).
-
An interface for each query, mutation, and fragment, named <OpertionName><Query | Mutation | Fragment>Data
. For example, query Home {}
becomes export interface HomeQueryData {}
.
-
A namespace for each operation that includes any nested types. For example, if we imagine the following GraphQL schema (using the GraphQL IDL):
type Person {
name: String!
relatives: [Person!]!
}
type Query {
person: Person
}
and the following query:
query Someone {
person {
name
}
}
The following exports would be generated:
export interface SomeoneQueryData {
person?: SomeoneQueryData.Person | null,
}
export namespace SomeoneQueryData {
export interface Person {
name: string,
}
}
This allows you to use the full query’s type, as well as any of the subtypes that make up that query type. This is particularly useful for list or nullable types, where you may need to directly the access the underlying type:
import someoneQueryDocument, {SomeoneQueryData} from './Someone.graphql';
let data: SomeoneQueryData;
let person: SomeoneQueryData.Person;
CLI
yarn run graphql-typescript-definitions 'src/**/*.graphql' -- --schema-path 'build/schema.json'
Optionally, you can pass the --watch
flag in order to regenerate the TypeScript definition files on changes to the GraphQL files.
Node
const {Builder} = require('graphql-typescript-definitions');
const builder = new Builder({
graphQLFiles: 'src/**/*.graphql',
schemaPath: 'build/schema.json',
});
builder.on('build', (build) => {
console.log(build);
});
builder.on('error', (error) => {
console.error(error);
});
builder.run();