This is the official Quasar app extension for adding GraphQL to your Quasar project.
This AE uses Apollo Client and Vue Apollo.
quasar ext add @quasar/apollo
NOTE: As of 2.1.0-beta.1, version 2 is now in the dev and default branch of the repository. It is also the version you'll get with the "normal" @quasar/apollo
package. No need to use @next
tag anymore.
IMPORTANT Since version 2.2.0-beta.2 we externalized all deps for this AE: graphql
, graphql-tag
, @apollo/client
and @vue/apollo-composable
. If you installed a previous version, rerun quasar ext add @quasar/apollo
command to have compatible deps added to your project's package.json
.
Version 1 has been deprecated and is no longer supported. If you wish to use it, you can install it with @quasar/apollo@1.0.0-beta.8
.
Quasar CLI will retrieve the extension from NPM (@quasar/quasar-app-extension-apollo)
The extension will add a configuration file into src/apollo
and a boot file.
IMPORTANT You'll need to manually register the boot file in quasar.conf.js > boot
.
Like so:
export default configure((/* ctx */) => {
return {
boot: [
'apollo'
],
// ....
}
You will be prompted if you wish to use GraphQL subscriptions, if you answer yes, you will be prompted which subscription transport you wish to use. Available options are:
- Web Socket (graphql-ws)
- SSE (Server-Sent Events) (graphql-sse)
After selecting the transport, the necessary dependencies will be installed and the initialization code will be scaffolded for you.
quasar ext remove @quasar/apollo
You might also wish to remove the added directory src/apollo
and related boot file.
Apollo client options can be customized in
src/apollo/index.(ts|js)
.
You will need either to set the GraphQL endpoint in it, or set it as an environment variable before running Quasar:
GRAPHQL_URI=https://prod.example.com/graphql quasar build
GRAPHQL_URI=https://dev.example.com/graphql quasar dev
If you don't have a GraphQL endpoint yet, you can create one to experiment with at FakeQL or other similar services.
If you are using GraphQL subscriptions, you will also need to set the WebSocket endpoint as an environment variable:
GRAPHQL_URI=https://prod.example.com/graphql GRAPHQL_WS_URI=wss://prod.example.com/graphql quasar build
GRAPHQL_URI=https://dev.example.com/graphql GRAPHQL_WS_URI=wss://dev.example.com/graphql quasar dev
You can use dotenv in quasar.config file to set these environment variables in a more convenient way, if you wish.
Check the guide in Vue Apollo docs.
Example usage:
src/pages/Index.vue
<template>
<q-page class="row items-center justify-evenly">
<div v-if="loading">Loading...</div>
<div v-else-if="error">Error: {{ error.message }}</div>
<div v-else-if="result && result.post">
<div>id: {{ result.post.id }}</div>
<div>title: {{ result.post.title }}</div>
</div>
...
</q-page>
</template>
<script setup lang="ts">
import { useQuery } from '@vue/apollo-composable'
import { gql } from '@apollo/client/core'
const { result, loading, error } = useQuery(gql`
query getPosts {
post(id: "3") {
id
title
}
}
`)
Un-comment the relevant code in boot/apollo.(ts|js)
The following is an example using clientA
instead of the default client:
// ...
const { result, loading, error } = useQuery(
gql`
query getPosts {
post(id: "3") {
id
title
}
}
`,
null,
{ clientId: 'clientA' },
)
// ...
An apollo.config.js
configuration file for Apollo GraphQL VSCode extension ((apollographql.vscode-apollo
)) will be automatically scaffolded.
You should fill in the client.service.url
property with the URL of the server exposing your GraphQL schema, check client.service
documentation to learn about other options.
This extension will automatically connect to your remote server, read your GraphQL schema and provide autocomplete/schema errors detection for your GraphQL queries.