ObjectTypes =========== An ObjectType is the single, definitive source of information about your data. It contains the essential fields and behaviors of the data you’re querying. The basics: - Each ObjectType is a Python class that inherits ``graphene.ObjectType`` or inherits an implemented `Interface`_. - Each attribute of the ObjectType represents a ``Field``. Quick example ------------- This example model defines a Person, which has a first\_name and last\_name: .. code:: python import graphene class Person(graphene.ObjectType): first_name = graphene.String() last_name = graphene.String() full_name = graphene.String() def resolve_full_name(self, args, context, info): return '{} {}'.format(self.first_name, self.last_name) **first\_name** and **last\_name** are fields of the ObjectType. Each field is specified as a class attribute, and each attribute maps to a Field. The above ``Person`` ObjectType would have the following representation in a schema: .. code:: graphql type Person { firstName: String lastName: String fullName: String } Resolvers --------- A resolver is a method that resolves certain field within a ``ObjectType``. The resolver of a field will be, if not specified otherwise, the ``resolve_{field_name}`` within the ``ObjectType``. By default a resolver will take the ``args``, ``context`` and ``info`` arguments. Quick example ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This example model defines a ``Query`` type, which has a reverse field that reverses the given ``word`` argument using the ``resolve_reverse`` method in the class. .. code:: python import graphene class Query(graphene.ObjectType): reverse = graphene.String(word=graphene.String()) def resolve_reverse(self, args, context, info): word = args.get('word') return word[::-1] Resolvers outside the class ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A field could also specify a custom resolver outside the class: .. code:: python import graphene def reverse(root, args, context, info): word = args.get('word') return word[::-1] class Query(graphene.ObjectType): reverse = graphene.String(word=graphene.String(), resolver=reverse) Instances as data containers ---------------------------- Graphene ``ObjectType``\ s could act as containers too. So with the previous example you could do. .. code:: python peter = Person(first_name='Peter', last_name='Griffin') peter.first_name # prints "Peter" peter.last_name # prints "Griffin" .. _Interface: /docs/interfaces/