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79 lines
1.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
79 lines
1.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
Mutations
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=========
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A Mutation is a special ObjectType that also defines an Input.
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Quick example
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-------------
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This example defines a Mutation:
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.. code:: python
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import graphene
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class CreatePerson(graphene.Mutation):
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class Input:
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name = graphene.String()
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ok = graphene.Boolean()
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person = graphene.Field(lambda: Person)
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def mutate(self, args, context, info):
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person = Person(name=args.get('name'))
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ok = True
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return CreatePerson(person=person, ok=ok)
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**person** and **ok** are the output fields of the Mutation when is
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resolved.
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**Input** attributes are the arguments that the Mutation
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``CreatePerson`` needs for resolving, in this case **name** will be the
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only argument for the mutation.
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**mutate** is the function that will be applied once the mutation is
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called.
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So, we can finish our schema like this:
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.. code:: python
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# ... the Mutation Class
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class Person(graphene.ObjectType):
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name = graphene.String()
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class MyMutations(graphene.ObjectType):
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create_person = CreatePerson.Field()
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schema = graphene.Schema(mutation=MyMutations)
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Executing the Mutation
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----------------------
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Then, if we query (``schema.execute(query_str)``) the following:
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.. code:: graphql
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mutation myFirstMutation {
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createPerson(name:"Peter") {
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person {
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name
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}
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ok
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}
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}
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We should receive:
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.. code:: json
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{
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"createPerson": {
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"person" : {
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name: "Peter"
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},
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"ok": true
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}
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}
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