Schema ====== A GraphQL **Schema** defines the types and relationships between **Fields** in your API. A Schema is created by supplying the root :ref:`ObjectType` of each operation, query (mandatory), mutation and subscription. Schema will collect all type definitions related to the root operations and then supply them to the validator and executor. .. code:: python my_schema = Schema( query=MyRootQuery, mutation=MyRootMutation, subscription=MyRootSubscription ) A Root Query is just a special :ref:`ObjectType` that defines the fields that are the entrypoint for your API. Root Mutation and Root Subscription are similar to Root Query, but for different operation types: * Query fetches data * Mutation changes data and retrieves the changes * Subscription sends changes to clients in real-time Review the `GraphQL documentation on Schema`_ for a brief overview of fields, schema and operations. .. _GraphQL documentation on Schema: https://graphql.org/learn/schema/ Querying -------- To query a schema, call the ``execute`` method on it. See :ref:`SchemaExecute` for more details. .. code:: python query_string = 'query whoIsMyBestFriend { myBestFriend { lastName } }' my_schema.execute(query_string) Types ----- There are some cases where the schema cannot access all of the types that we plan to have. For example, when a field returns an ``Interface``, the schema doesn't know about any of the implementations. In this case, we need to use the ``types`` argument when creating the Schema. .. code:: python my_schema = Schema( query=MyRootQuery, types=[SomeExtraObjectType, ] ) .. _SchemaAutoCamelCase: Auto camelCase field names -------------------------- By default all field and argument names (that are not explicitly set with the ``name`` arg) will be converted from ``snake_case`` to ``camelCase`` (as the API is usually being consumed by a js/mobile client) For example with the ObjectType .. code:: python class Person(graphene.ObjectType): last_name = graphene.String() other_name = graphene.String(name='_other_Name') the ``last_name`` field name is converted to ``lastName``. In case you don't want to apply this transformation, provide a ``name`` argument to the field constructor. ``other_name`` converts to ``_other_Name`` (without further transformations). Your query should look like .. code:: { lastName _other_Name } To disable this behavior, set the ``auto_camelcase`` to ``False`` upon schema instantiation. .. code:: python my_schema = Schema( query=MyRootQuery, auto_camelcase=False, )