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Apollo and GraphQL for Vue.js

npm npm vue1 vue2

schema

Integrates apollo in your Vue components with declarative queries. Compatible with Vue 1.0+ and 2.0+

icon More vue-apollo examples

icon Apollo graphql server example

icon Apollo "hello world" example app (outdated)

icon Howto on Medium

Table of contents

Installation

Try and install this packages before server side set (of packages), add apollo to meteor.js before then, too.

npm install --save vue-apollo apollo-client@^0.5.0

In your app, create an ApolloClient instance and install the VueApollo plugin:

import Vue from 'vue'
import { ApolloClient, createNetworkInterface } from 'apollo-client'
import VueApollo from 'vue-apollo'

// Create the apollo client
const apolloClient = new ApolloClient({
  networkInterface: createNetworkInterface({
    uri: 'http://localhost:3020/graphql',
    transportBatching: true,
  }),
  connectToDevTools: true,
})

// Install the vue plugin
Vue.use(VueApollo)

Create a provider

Like vue-router or vuex, you need to specify the apolloProvider object on your root components. A provider holds the apollo client instances that can then be used by all the child components.

const apolloProvider = new VueApollo({
  defaultClient: apolloClient,
})

new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  apolloProvider,
  render: h => h(App),
})

Usage in components

To declare apollo queries in your Vue component, add an apollo object :

new Vue({
    apollo: {
        // Apollo specific options
    },
})

You can access the apollo-client instance with this.$apollo.client in all your vue components.

Queries

In the apollo object, add an attribute for each property you want to feed with the result of an Apollo query.

Simple query

Use gql to write your GraphQL queries:

import gql from 'graphql-tag'

Put the gql query directly as the value:

apollo: {
  // Simple query that will update the 'hello' vue property
  hello: gql`{hello}`,
},

You can then access the query with this.$apollo.queries.<name>.

You can initialize the property in your vue component's data hook:

data () {
  return {
    // Initialize your apollo data
    hello: '',
  },
},

Server-side, add the corresponding schema and resolver:

export const schema = `
type Query {
  hello: String
}

schema {
  query: Query
}
`

export const resolvers = {
  Query: {
    hello(root, args, context) {
      return "Hello world!"
    },
  },
}

For more info, visit the apollo doc.

You can then use your property as usual in your vue component:

<template>
  <div class="apollo">
    <h3>Hello</h3>
    <p>
      {{hello}}
    </p>
  </div>
</template>

Query with parameters

You can add variables (read parameters) to your gql query by declaring query and variables in an object:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // Query with parameters
  ping: {
    // gql query
    query: gql`query PingMessage($message: String!) {
      ping(message: $message)
    }`,
    // Static parameters
    variables: {
      message: 'Meow',
    },
  },
},

You can use the apollo watchQuery options in the object, like:

  • fetchPolicy
  • pollInterval
  • ...

See the apollo doc for more details.

For example, you could add the forceFetch apollo option like this:

apollo: {
  // Query with parameters
  ping: {
    query: gql`query PingMessage($message: String!) {
      ping(message: $message)
    }`,
    variables: {
      message: 'Meow'
    },
    // Additional options here
    fetchPolicy: 'cache-and-network',
  },
},

Again, you can initialize your property in your vue component:

data () {
  return {
    // Initialize your apollo data
    ping: '',
  }
},

Server-side, add the corresponding schema and resolver:

export const schema = `
type Query {
  ping(message: String!): String
}

schema {
  query: Query
}
`

export const resolvers = {
  Query: {
    ping(root, { message }, context) {
      return `Answering ${message}`
    },
  },
}

And then use it in your vue component:

<template>
  <div class="apollo">
    <h3>Ping</h3>
    <p>
      {{ping}}
    </p>
  </div>
</template>

Option function

You can use a function to initialize the key:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // Query with parameters
  ping () {
    // This will called one when the component is created
    // It must return the option object
    return {
      // gql query
      query: gql`query PingMessage($message: String!) {
        ping(message: $message)
      }`,
      // Static parameters
      variables: {
        message: 'Meow',
      },
    }
  },
},

This will called once when the component is created and it must return the option object.

This also works for subscriptions.

Reactive query definition

You can use a function for the query option, that will update the graphql query definition automatically:

// The featured tag can be either a random tag or the last added tag
featuredTag: {
  query () {
    // Here you can access the component instance with 'this'
    if (this.showTag === 'random') {
      return gql`{
        randomTag {
          id
          label
          type
        }
      }`
    } else if (this.showTag === 'last') {
      return gql`{
        lastTag {
          id
          label
          type
        }
      }`
    }
  },
  // We need this to assign the value of the 'featuredTag' component property
  update: data => data.randomTag || data.lastTag,
},

This also works for subscriptions.

Reactive parameters

Use a function instead to make the parameters reactive with vue properties:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // Query with parameters
  ping: {
    query: gql`query PingMessage($message: String!) {
      ping(message: $message)
    }`,
    // Reactive parameters
    variables() {
      // Use vue reactive properties here
      return {
          message: this.pingInput,
      }
    },
  },
},

This will re-fetch the query each time a parameter changes, for example:

<template>
  <div class="apollo">
    <h3>Ping</h3>
    <input v-model="pingInput" placeholder="Enter a message" />
    <p>
      {{ping}}
    </p>
  </div>
</template>

Skipping the query

If the query is skipped, it will disable it and the result will not be updated anymore. You can use the skip option:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  tags: {
    // GraphQL Query
    query: gql`query tagList ($type: String!) {
      tags(type: $type) {
        id
        label
      }
    }`,
    // Reactive variables
    variables() {
      return {
        type: this.type,
      }
    },
    // Disable the query
    skip() {
      return this.skipQuery
    },
  },
},

Here, skip will be called automatically when the skipQuery component property changes.

You can also access the query directly and set the skip property:

this.$apollo.quries.tags.skip = true

Advanced options

These are the available advanced options you can use:

  • update(data) {return ...} to customize the value that is set in the vue property, for example if the field names don't match.
  • result(ApolloQueryResult) is a hook called when a result is received (see documentation for ApolloQueryResult).
  • error(error) is a hook called when there are errors, error being an Apollo error object with either a graphQLErrors property or a networkError property.
  • loadingKey will update the component data property you pass as the value. You should initialize this property to 0 in the component data() hook. When the query is loading, this property will be incremented by 1 and as soon as it no longer is, the property will be decremented by 1. That way, the property can represent a counter of currently loading queries.
  • watchLoading(isLoading, countModifier) is a hook called when the loading state of the query changes. The countModifier parameter is either equal to 1 when the query is now loading, or -1 when the query is no longer loading.
// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // Advanced query with parameters
  // The 'variables' method is watched by vue
  pingMessage: {
    query: gql`query PingMessage($message: String!) {
      ping(message: $message)
    }`,
    // Reactive parameters
    variables() {
      // Use vue reactive properties here
      return {
          message: this.pingInput,
      }
    },
    // We use a custom update callback because
    // the field names don't match
    // By default, the 'pingMessage' attribute
    // would be used on the 'data' result object
    // Here we know the result is in the 'ping' attribute
    // considering the way the apollo server works
    update(data) {
      console.log(data)
      // The returned value will update
      // the vue property 'pingMessage'
      return data.ping
    },
    // Optional result hook
    result({ data, loader, networkStatus }) {
      console.log("We got some result!")
    },
    // Error handling
    error(error) {
      console.error('We\'ve got an error!', error)
    },
    // Loading state
    // loadingKey is the name of the data property
    // that will be incremented when the query is loading
    // and decremented when it no longer is.
    loadingKey: 'loadingQueriesCount',
    // watchLoading will be called whenever the loading state changes
    watch
341A
Loading(isLoading, countModifier) {
      // isLoading is a boolean
      // countModifier is either 1 or -1
    },
  },
},

If you use ES2015, you can also write the update like this:

update: data => data.ping

Reactive Query Example

Here is a reactive query example using polling:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // 'tags' data property on vue instance
  tags: {
    query: gql`query tagList {
      tags {
        id,
        label
      }
    }`,
    pollInterval: 300, // ms
  },
},

Here is how the server-side looks like:

export const schema = `
type Tag {
  id: Int
  label: String
}

type Query {
  tags: [Tag]
}

schema {
  query: Query
}
`

// Fake word generator
import casual from 'casual'

// Let's generate some tags
var id = 0
var tags = []
for (let i = 0; i < 42; i++) {
  addTag(casual.word)
}

function addTag(label) {
  let t = {
    id: id++,
    label,
  }
  tags.push(t)
  return t
}

export const resolvers = {
  Query: {
    tags(root, args, context) {
      return tags
    },
  },
}

Mutations

Mutations are queries that changes your data state on your apollo server. For more info, visit the apollo doc.

methods: {
  addTag() {
    // We save the user input in case of an error
    const newTag = this.newTag
    // We clear it early to give the UI a snappy feel
    this.newTag = ''
    // Call to the graphql mutation
    this.$apollo.mutate({
      // Query
      mutation: gql`mutation ($label: String!) {
        addTag(label: $label) {
          id
          label
        }
      }`,
      // Parameters
      variables: {
        label: newTag,
      },
      // Update the cache with the result
      // 'tagList' is the name of the query declared before
      // that will be updated with the optimistic response
      // and the result of the mutation
      updateQueries: {
        tagList: (previousResult, { mutationResult }) => {
          // We incorporate any received result (either optimistic or real)
          // into the 'tagList' query we set up earlier
          return {
            tags: [...previousResult.tags, mutationResult.data.addTag],
          }
        },
      },
      // Optimistic UI
      // Will be treated as a 'fake' result as soon as the request is made
      // 
F438
so that the UI can react quickly and the user be happy
      optimisticResponse: {
        __typename: 'Mutation',
        addTag: {
          __typename: 'Tag',
          id: -1,
          label: newTag,
        },
      },
    }).then((data) => {
      // Result
      console.log(data)
    }).catch((error) => {
      // Error
      console.error(error)
      // We restore the initial user input
      this.newTag = newTag
    })
  },
},

Server-side:

export const schema = `
type Tag {
  id: Int
  label: String
}

type Query {
  tags: [Tag]
}

type Mutation {
  addTag(label: String!): Tag
}

schema {
  query: Query
  mutation: Mutation
}
`

// Fake word generator
import faker from 'faker'

// Let's generate some tags
var id = 0
var tags = []
for (let i = 0; i < 42; i++) {
  addTag(faker.random.word())
}

function addTag(label) {
  let t = {
    id: id++,
    label,
  }
  tags.push(t)
  return t
}

export const resolvers = {
  Query: {
    tags(root, args, context) {
      return tags
    },
  },
  Mutation: {
    addTag(root, { label }, context) {
      console.log(`adding tag '${label}'`)
      return addTag(label)
    },
  },
}

Subscriptions

For the server implementation, you can take a look at this simple example.

To make enable the websocket-based subscription, a bit of additional setup is required:

import Vue from 'vue'
import { ApolloClient, createNetworkInterface } from 'apollo-client'
// New Imports
import { SubscriptionClient, addGraphQLSubscriptions } from 'subscriptions-transport-ws'
import VueApollo from 'vue-apollo'

// Create the network interface
const networkInterface = createNetworkInterface({
  uri: 'http://localhost:3000/graphql',
  transportBatching: true,
})

// Create the subscription websocket client
const wsClient = new SubscriptionClient('ws://localhost:3000/subscriptions', {
  reconnect: true,
})

// Extend the network interface with the subscription client
const networkInterfaceWithSubscriptions = addGraphQLSubscriptions(
  networkInterface,
  wsClient,
)

// Create the apollo client with the new network interface
const apolloClient = new ApolloClient({
  networkInterface: networkInterfaceWithSubscriptions,
  connectToDevTools: true,
})

// Install the plugin like before
Vue.use(VueApollo, {
  apolloClient,
})

// Your app is now subscription-ready!

import App from './App.vue'

new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  render: h => h(App)
})

subscribeToMore

If you need to update a query result from a subscription, the best way is using the subscribeToMore query method. You can access the queries you defined in the apollo option with this.$apollo.queries.<name>, so it would look like this:

this.$apollo.queries.tags.subscribeToMore({
  // GraphQL document
  document: gql`subscription name($param: String!) {
    itemAdded(param: $param) {
      id
      label
    }
  }`,
  // Variables passed to the subscription
  variables: {
    param: '42',
  },
  // Mutate the previous result
  updateQuery: (previousResult, { subscriptionData }) => {
    // Here, return the new result from the previous with the new data
  },
})

If the related query is stopped, the subscription will be automatically destroyed.

Here is an example:

// Subscription GraphQL document
const TAG_ADDED = gql`subscription tags($type: String!) {
  tagAdded(type: $type) {
    id
    label
    type
  }
}`

// SubscribeToMore tags
// We have different types of tags
// with one subscription 'channel' for each type
this.$watch(() => this.type, (type, oldType) => {
  if (type !== oldType || !this.tagsSub) {
    // We need to unsubscribe before re-subscribing
    if (this.tagsSub) {
      this.tagsSub.unsubscribe()
    }
    // Subscribe on the query
    this.tagsSub = this.$apollo.queries.tags.subscribeToMore({
      document: TAG_ADDED,
      variables: {
        type,
      },
      // Mutate the previous result
      updateQuery: (previousResult, { subscriptionData }) => {
        // If we added the tag already don't do anything
        // This can be caused by the `updateQuery` of our addTag mutation
        if (previousResult.tags.find(tag => tag.id === subscriptionData.data.tagAdded.id)) {
          return previousResult
        }

        return {
          tags: [
            ...previousResult.tags,
            // Add the new tag
            subscriptionData.data.tagAdded,
          ],
        }
      },
    })
  }
}, {
  immediate: true,
})

subscribe

⚠️ If you want to update a query with the result of the subscription, use subscribeForMore. The methods below are suitable for a 'notify' use case.

Use the $apollo.subscribe() method to subscribe to a GraphQL subscription that will get killed automatically when the component is destroyed:

mounted() {
  const subQuery = gql`subscription tags($type: String!) {
    tagAdded(type: $type) {
      id
      label
      type
    }
  }`

  const observer = this.$apollo.subscribe({
    query: subQuery,
    variables: {
      type: 'City',
    },
  })

  observer.subscribe({
    next(data) {
      console.log(data)
    },
    error(error) {
      console.error(error)
    },
  })
},

You can declare subscriptions in the apollo option with the $subscribe keyword:

apollo: {
  // Subscriptions
  $subscribe: {
    // When a tag is added
    tags: {
      query: gql`subscription tags($type: String!) {
        tagAdded(type: $type) {
          id
          label
          type
        }
      }`,
      // Reactive variables
      variables() {
        // This works just like regular queries
        // and will re-subscribe with the right variables
        // each time the values change
        return {
          type: this.type,
        }
      },
      // Result hook
      result(data) {
        console.log(data)
      },
    },
  },
},

You can then access the subscription with this.$apollo.subscriptions.<name>.

Just like queries, you can declare the subscription with a function, and you can declare the query option with a reactive function.

Skipping the subscription

If the subscription is skipped, it will disable it and it will not be updated anymore. You can use the skip option:

// Apollo-specific options
apollo: {
  // Subscriptions
  $subscribe: {
    // When a tag is added
    tags: {
      query: gql`subscription tags($type: String!) {
        tagAdded(type: $type) {
          id
          label
          type
        }
      }`,
      // Reactive variables
      variables() {
        return {
          type: this.type,
        }
      },
      // Result hook
      result(data) {
        // Let's update the local data
        this.tags.push(data.tagAdded)
      },
      // Skip the subscription
      skip() {
        return this.skipSubscription
      }
    },
  },
},

Here, skip will be called automatically when the skipSubscription component property changes.

You can also access the subscription directly and set the skip property:

this.$apollo.subscriptions.tags.skip = true

Pagination with fetchMore

Here is a simple example for the server.

Use the fetchMore() method on the query:

<template>
  <div id="app">
    <h2>Pagination</h2>
    <div class="tag-list" v-if="tagsPage">
      <div class="tag-list-item" v-for="tag in tagsPage.tags">
        {{ tag.id }} - {{ tag.label }} - {{ tag.type }}
      </div>
      <div class="actions">
        <button v-if="showMoreEnabled" @click="showMore">Show more</button>
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import gql from 'graphql-tag'

const pageSize = 10

export default {
  name: 'app',
  data: () => ({
    page: 0,
    showMoreEnabled: true,
  }),
  apollo: {
    // Pages
    tagsPage: {
      // GraphQL Query
      query: gql`query tagsPage ($page: Int!, $pageSize: Int!) {
        tagsPage(page: $page, size: $pageSize) {
          tags {
            id
            label
            type
          }
          hasMore
        }
      }`,
      // Initial variables
      variables: {
        page: 0,
        pageSize,
      },
    },
  },
  methods: {
    showMore() {
      this.page ++
      // Fetch more data and transform the original result
      this.$apollo.queries.tagsPage.fetchMore({
        // New variables
        variables: {
          page: this.page,
          pageSize,
        },
        // Transform the previous result with new data
        updateQuery: (previousResult, { fetchMoreResult }) => {
          const newTags = fetchMoreResult.tagsPage.tags
          const hasMore = fetchMoreResult.tagsPage.hasMore

          this.showMoreEnabled = hasMore

          return {
            tagsPage: {
              // Merging the tag list
              tags: [...previousResult.tagsPage.tags, ...newTags],
              hasMore,
            },
          }
        },
      })
    },
  },
}
</script>

Skip all

You can disable all the queries for the component with skipAllQueries, all the subscriptions with skipAllSubscriptions and both with skipAll:

this.$apollo.skipAllQueries = true
this.$apollo.skipAllSubscriptions = true
this.$apollo.skipAll = true

You can also declare these properties in the apollo option of the component. It can be booleans:

apollo: {
  $skipAll: true
}

Or reactive functions:

apollo: {
  $skipAll () {
    return this.foo === 42
  }
}

Multiple clients

You can specify multiple apollo clients if your app needs to connect to different GraphQL endpoints:

const apolloProvider = new VueApollo({
  clients: {
    a: apolloClient,
    b: otherApolloClient,
  },
  defaultClient: apolloClient,
})

In the component apollo option, you can define the client for all the queries, subscriptions and mutations with $client (only for this component):

export default {
  apollo: {
    $client: 'b',
  },
}

You can also specify the client in individual queries, subscriptions and mutations with the client property in the options:

tags: {
  query: gql`...`,
  client: 'b',
}

Server-Side Rendering

(Work in progress)

Use apolloProvider.collect() to being collect queries made against this provider. You get a function that returns a promise when all queries collected are ready. Note that the provider stops collecting queries when you call the function.

const ensureReady = apolloProvider.collect({
  // If set to false, may resolve when partial/cache result is emitted
  waitForLoaded: true, // default
})

new Vue({
  el: '#app',
  apolloProvider,
  render: h => h(App),
})

ensureReady().then(results => {
  console.log(results.length, 'queries ready')
})

White paper


LICENCE ISC - Created by Guillaume CHAU (@Akryum)

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