The short answer is: you don't.
The longer answer is that you have to write that code yourself. GraphQL isn't a database query language like SQL, it's an application query language. What that means is that GraphQL won't let you write arbitrary queries out of the box. It will only support the types of queries defined in your GraphQL schema.
If you want to be able to write a query that contains like
, you have to
a) declare that in the schema, and
b) write a resolve function that fetches the data
For example, you could have this schema:
type Query {
users(firstName: String!): [User]
}
type User {
firstName: String
lastName: String
}
You would have to define the following resolve function for the users
field:
{
Query: {
users(root, args){
return sql.raw('SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `firstName` LIKE ?', args.firstName);
}
}
}
And finally write this query to get a list of firstName and lastName of all the users that match your search criteria:
{
users(firstName: 'jason%'){
firstName
lastName
}
}
Here's a post I wrote a while ago that clarifies some of the concepts around GraphQL: https://medium.com/apollo-stack/how-do-i-graphql-2fcabfc94a01
And here's a post that explains the interplay between GraphQL schemas and resolve functions: https://medium.com/apollo-stack/graphql-explained-5844742f195e
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