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graphql-operations

Methodology skill.md.

apollographql/skills
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Install

npx skills add https://github.com/apollographql/skills --skill graphql-operations

Use with your agent

ClaudeCursorOpenAIGemini

Install the graphql-operations skill, then use it as build context. Run: npx skills add https://github.com/apollographql/skills --skill graphql-operations. Then read the installed skill.md and follow its guidance to build or refactor my project.

GraphQL Operations Guide

This guide covers best practices for writing GraphQL operations (queries, mutations, subscriptions) as a client developer. Well-written operations are efficient, type-safe, and maintainable.

Operation Basics

Query Structure

query GetUser($id: ID!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    id
    name
    email
  }
}

Mutation Structure

mutation CreatePost($input: CreatePostInput!) {
  createPost(input: $input) {
    id
    title
    createdAt
  }
}

Subscription Structure

subscription OnMessageReceived($channelId: ID!) {
  messageReceived(channelId: $channelId) {
    id
    content
    sender {
      id
      name
    }
  }
}

Quick Reference

Operation Naming

PatternExample
QueryGetUser, ListPosts, SearchProducts
MutationCreateUser, UpdatePost, DeleteComment
SubscriptionOnMessageReceived, OnUserStatusChanged

Variable Syntax

# Required variable
query GetUser($id: ID!) { ... }

# Optional variable with default
query ListPosts($first: Int = 20) { ... }

# Multiple variables
query SearchPosts($query: String!, $status: PostStatus, $first: Int = 10) { ... }

Fragment Syntax

# Define fragment
fragment UserBasicInfo on User {
  id
  name
  avatarUrl
}

# Use fragment
query GetUser($id: ID!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    ...UserBasicInfo
    email
  }
}

Directives

query GetUser($id: ID!, $includeEmail: Boolean!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    id
    name
    email @include(if: $includeEmail)
  }
}

query GetPosts($skipDrafts: Boolean!) {
  posts {
    id
    title
    draft @skip(if: $skipDrafts)
  }
}

Key Principles

1. Request Only What You Need

# Good: Specific fields
query GetUserName($id: ID!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    id
    name
  }
}

# Avoid: Over-fetching
query GetUser($id: ID!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    id
    name
    email
    bio
    posts {
      id
      title
      content
      comments {
        id
      }
    }
    followers {
      id
      name
    }
    # ... many unused fields
  }
}

2. Name All Operations

# Good: Named operation
query GetUserPosts($userId: ID!) {
  user(id: $userId) {
    posts {
      id
      title
    }
  }
}

# Avoid: Anonymous operation
query {
  user(id: "123") {
    posts {
      id
      title
    }
  }
}

3. Use Variables, Not Inline Values

# Good: Variables
query GetUser($id: ID!) {
  user(id: $id) {
    id
    name
  }
}

# Avoid: Hardcoded values
query {
  user(id: "123") {
    id
    name
  }
}

4. Colocate Fragments with Components

// UserAvatar.tsx
export const USER_AVATAR_FRAGMENT = gql`
  fragment UserAvatar on User {
    id
    name
    avatarUrl
  }
`;

function UserAvatar({ user }) {
  return <img src={user.avatarUrl} alt={user.name} />;
}

Reference Files

Detailed documentation for specific topics:

  • Queries - Query patterns and optimization
  • Mutations - Mutation patterns and error handling
  • Fragments - Fragment organization and reuse
  • Variables - Variable usage and types
  • Tooling - Code generation and linting

Ground Rules

  • ALWAYS name your operations (no anonymous queries/mutations)
  • ALWAYS use variables for dynamic values
  • ALWAYS request only the fields you need
  • ALWAYS include id field for cacheable types
  • NEVER hardcode values in operations
  • NEVER duplicate field selections across files
  • PREFER fragments for reusable field selections
  • PREFER colocating fragments with components
  • USE descriptive operation names that reflect purpose
  • USE @include/@skip for conditional fields
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