Scalars
Aliases
TypeGraphQL provides aliases for 3 basic scalars:
- Int --> GraphQLInt;
- Float --> GraphQLFloat;
- ID --> GraphQLID;
This shorthand allows you to save keystrokes when declaring field type:
// import the aliases
import { ID, Float, Int } from "type-graphql";
@ObjectType()
class MysteryObject {
@Field(type => ID)
readonly id: string;
@Field(type => Int)
notificationsCount: number;
@Field(type => Float)
probability: number;
}
In the last case you can omit the type => Float
since JavaScript Number
will become GraphQLFloat
in the schema automatically.
Other scalars - i.e. GraphQLString
and GraphQLBoolean
- do not need aliases. When possible, they will be reflected automatically:
@ObjectType()
class User {
@Field()
name: string;
@Field()
isOld: boolean;
}
However in some cases you will have to explicitly declare the string/bool scalar type. Use JS constructor functions (String
, Boolean
) then:
@ObjectType()
class SampleObject {
@Field(type => String, { nullable: true })
get optionalInfo(): string | undefined {
// TS reflected type is `Object` :(
if (Math.random() > 0.5) {
return "Gotcha!";
}
}
}
Date Scalars
TypeGraphQL provides built-in scalars for the Date
type. There are two versions of this scalar:
- timestamp based (
"timestamp"
) -1518037458374
- ISO format (
"isoDate"
) -"2018-02-07T21:04:39.573Z"
They are exported from type-graphql
package as GraphQLISODateScalar
and GraphQLTimestampScalar
.
By default TypeGraphQL use the ISO date format, however you can change it in buildSchema
options:
import { buildSchema } from "type-graphql";
const schema = await buildSchema({
resolvers,
dateScalarMode: "timestamp", // "timestamp" or "isoDate"
});
There's no need to explicitly declare the field type then:
@ObjectType()
class User {
@Field()
registrationDate: Date;
}
If you use ts-node
, be aware you must execute it with the --type-check
flag due to a Date reflection bug.
Custom Scalars
TypeGraphQL also support custom scalar types.
First of all, you need to create your own GraphQLScalarType
instance or import the scalar type from a 3rd-party npm library. For example, Mongo's ObjectId:
import { GraphQLScalarType, Kind } from "graphql";
import { ObjectId } from "mongodb";
export const ObjectIdScalar = new GraphQLScalarType({
name: "ObjectId",
description: "Mongo object id scalar type",
parseValue(value: string) {
return new ObjectId(value); // value from the client input variables
},
serialize(value: ObjectId) {
return value.toHexString(); // value sent to the client
},
parseLiteral(ast) {
if (ast.kind === Kind.STRING) {
return new ObjectId(ast.value); // value from the client query
}
return null;
},
});
Then you can just use it in your field decorators:
// import the earlier created const
import { ObjectIdScalar } from "../my-scalars/ObjectId";
@ObjectType()
class User {
@Field(type => ObjectIdScalar) // and explicitly use it
readonly id: ObjectId;
@Field()
name: string;
@Field()
isOld: boolean;
}
Optionally, you can declare the association between the reflected property type and your scalars to automatically map them (no need to explicit type annotation!):
@ObjectType()
class User {
@Field() // magic goes here - no type annotation for custom scalar
readonly id: ObjectId;
}
All you need to do is register the association map in the buildSchema
options:
import { ObjectId } from "mongodb";
import { ObjectIdScalar } from "../my-scalars/ObjectId";
import { buildSchema } from "type-graphql";
const schema = await buildSchema({
resolvers,
scalarsMap: [{ type: ObjectId, scalar: ObjectIdScalar }],
});
However, be aware that this will work only when the TypeScript reflection mechanism can handle it. So your class property type must be the class
, not an enum, union or an interface.