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graphql-inquirer

v0.7.5

Published

A visual browser for GraphQL APIs

Readme

GraphQL Inquirer

A visual data browser for GraphQL APIs.

Disclaimer:
This project is still under development and may not perform as expected. Use at your own risk.

Use

Install via NPM

$ npm install graphql-inquirer

Note You must npm install --save [email protected] in the parent project, or manually in this project if you are running the example. This is because react-router-dom needs to be a peer dependency to not conflict with the parents installation when using in a routed app.

Set up a fetcher function. It must point to a valid introspectable GraphQL API, take a query as input and return a Promise.

// with Fetch API
function MyFetcher(query) {

  var request_options = {
    method: 'POST',
    headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
    body: JSON.stringify(query)
  }

  return fetch('url://to.your.api', request_options).then((response) => (response.json()));
}

Import and render with React

import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'

import GraphQLInquirer from 'graphql-inquirer';

ReactDOM.render(<GraphQLInquirer fetcher={MyFetcher} />, document.getElementById('my-root-component'))

Using with an existing React Router

If you already have a React Router set up in yout project, just add isInARouter as a prop:

const RoutedApp = (
  <HashRouter>
    <Route path="/stuff/" component={() =>
      <Inquirer fetcher={MyFetcher} isInARouter />
    } />
  </HashRouter>
)

ReactDOM.render(RoutedApp, document.getElementById('my-root-component'))

Development

  1. Clone or fork the repository and run $ npm install

  2. Run $ npm run serve to start Webpack Dev Server

  3. Do your thing

  4. Run $ npm run build to build the project