last day (15 days later) » 

20:07
0
Q: GraphQL Playground Query JSON To Postgres - How To Avoid Double Quotes In Query String?

PrestonThe Query Variables section of Playground seems to require a JSON object for the query argument. With Postgres we can't use double quotes for a string, it must be single quotes. Playground is sending double quotes in the JSON. The results is an error and null response. What is the work around? ...

The variables JSON object is parsed by GraphQL into the appropriate format according to the type specified for each variable. When these variable values appear as part of the args parameter passed to your resolver, they are already the correct JavaScript type. For example a GraphQL String variable with the value sjohns will become a JavaScript String with the same value. The value itself will not include any quotes.
In other words, there should be no need to provide single quotes inside the value of user_name. If you are encountering an error, it's most likely because of how you are providing these values to your query. But the resolver code is not shown.
Thank you @DanielRearden! Notice that in the terminal the param shows as "sjohns". If that is going to Postgres then it will fail. I added the schema and resolver. I'm using a TypeORM repository which is working for the other queries.
If you're using TypeORM, the PARAMETERS you see in the console are the result of calling a JSON.stringify on the query parameter values (see here). So $1 is a string literal, as expected. Unless there's some issue with your Entity definition, I don't think there's anything wrong here.
What's the exact error you're seeing?
@DanielRearden I've added the error message. TypeORM isn't stringifying integers. Interesting. I had everything working with REST but then decided to try GraphQL. Entity should be fine because it is working with other queries and worked with REST.
@DanielRearden The getMembers and getMember queries work fine. I'm trying to check the db to see if a user name on an add member form is already taken.
@Preston let's continue this in chat since the comment thread was getting a bit lenghty
The issue you're seeing is not related to input validation.
checkUserName returns a Member type and that type has a non-null field named user_name
As the error indicates, the field is resolving to null, which it can't because you've made it non-null in the schema
Now it's possible that user_name is actually returning null from the database
But we often see this sort of error when the resolver doesn't return the response in the correct "shape"
i.e. checkUserName's resolver should return a Member Object
does membersService.checkUserName return a Member Object, or does it return something else (like a Boolean, or maybe an Object or Array that contains the actual Member)?
20:26
@DanielRearden It just returns that error. Notice the object at the end of the error message. "data": null. I believe that this would be the message if Postreges encountered double quotes, which may have led me down the wrong path. Your shape idea is interesting.
@Preston data is null because of how GraphQL handles non-null fields.
I would handle the null error in my code as the user name is not already taken. However, I'm testing with names that are in the db.
There is no null error for you to handle. The error you're seeing is because the value being returned is not passing validation
There is no error being thrown by postgres. The errors you're seeing are due to the user_name field resolving to null, which it can't because it's non-null. What does membersService.checkUserName actually return?
In my posts you'll see this for console.log in terminal: user_name in service: sjohns This it does the query: select from where and that's all I have along with the null data object. I see that null can cover other issues besides what I would expect from a null response. Confusing :-)
20:43
If you do console.log(await membersService.checkUserName(user_name)) inside your resolver, what is shown?
[ Members {
member_id: 42,
first_name: 'Sal',
last_name: 'Johns',
user_name: 'sjohns',
} ]
So that returns an Array, while the type of your field is an Object
Thanks, I forgot about that technique. I've been going down the wrong path and getting flustered :-)
So you can change your field type to [Member] (a List of Members), but you probably don't want that
Instead, you want to grab the first item from that array inside your resolver and then return that
then the user_name field will resolve correctly, and you won't see the error anymore
Please refer to Common Scenario #2 here: stackoverflow.com/questions/56319137/…
Wow, you wrote a small book in SO :-) A lot to study! Thanks! How do I grab the first object in the array in GraphQL? OK, I found your suggestion #2. I just have to figure out how that works in TypeORM which is a bit different.
20:55
const members = await membersService.checkUserName(user_name)
return members[0]
...or (await membersService.checkUserName(user_name))[0]
or modify checkUserName accordingly
not really familiar enough with TypeORM enough to give more guidance, sorry
Good luck!
OK, very JavaScripty. Nice. Please put an answer to my SO question so I can give points. Also, PM me if you do such consulting for money.
21:12
Your first suggestion worked perfect! Response in Playground: {
"data": {
"checkUserName": {
"user_name": "sjohns"
}
}
}
Actually, my question isn't a dup. This isn't covered anywhere. While the comments provide the solution I think the question needs an answer to help others.

last day (15 days later) »