(A) Solution with graphql-scalars
The original answer is below.
Here is another one solution with graphql-scalars
library:
- install
npm install graphql-scalars
and then
- import their
Void
type: https://www.graphql-scalars.dev/docs/scalars/void
(B) Solution with a custom scalar
Note: design with void
-result from mutations goes against "GQL best practices"
This example was written for NodeJS Apollo Framework, but it is pretty easy to convert the implementation for your language/framework
I'm pretty sure: there is an NPM-package named graphql-void
but if you don't want to add another one dependency just copy this code.
1. define Void
-scalar in your schema
# file: ./schema.gql
scalar Void
2. implement resolver
// file ./scalar-void.js
import { GraphQLScalarType } from 'graphql'
const Void = new GraphQLScalarType({
name: 'Void',
description: 'Represents NULL values',
serialize() {
return null
},
parseValue() {
return null
},
parseLiteral() {
return null
}
})
export Void
3. add the resolver to ApolloServer
Add the Void
resolver to the options of your instance of Apollo Server:
# file: ./server.js
import { ApolloServer } from 'apollo-server-express'
import { Void } from './scalar-void'
const server = new ApolloServer({
typeDefs, // use your schema
resolvers: {
Void: Void,
// ... your resolvers
},
})
4. use Void
for your mutations in the schema
Finally, use the new scalar
in your schema:
# file: ./schema.gql
type Mutation{
addElement(element: ElementData): ID
removeElement(id: ID): Void
}
Void
type as shown below, but the return value is how the client tells whether an operation succeeded. It's possible for the request to succeed (e.g., status 200) and yet one or more mutations fail (e.g., because of a database error).