Crates.io | cynic |
lib.rs | cynic |
version | 3.9.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-02-03 23:19:39.137319 |
updated_at | 2024-12-03 14:28:34.944049 |
description | A code first GraphQL client for Rust |
homepage | https://cynic-rs.dev |
repository | https://github.com/obmarg/cynic |
max_upload_size | |
id | 204610 |
size | 218,290 |
Cynic is a GraphQL library for Rust. It's not the first but it takes a different approach from the existing libraries.
Existing libraries take a query first approach to GQL - you write a query using GraphQL and libraries use that to generate Rust structs for you using macros. This is really easy and great for getting going quickly. However, if you want to use structs that aren't quite what the macros output you're out of luck. Some more complex use cases like sharing structs among queries are also commonly not supported.
Cynic takes a different approach - it uses Rust structs to define queries and
generates GraphQL from them. This gives you freedom to control the structs
you'll be working with while still enjoying type safe queries, checked against
the GraphQL schema. When its built in derives
don't do exactly what you
want it provides lower level APIs to hook in and fetch the data you want in the
format you want to work with it.
Of course writing out all the structs to represent a large GraphQL query can be
quite challenging, and GraphQL has excellent tooling for building queries
usually. Cynic provides querygen
to help with this - you write a
GraphQL query using the existing GQL tooling and it'll generate some cynic
structs to make that query. You can use this as a starting point for your
projects - either adding on to the rust structs directly, or re-using
querygen
as appropriate.
Cynic is currently a work in progress, but the following features are supported:
cynic-cli
or cynic-introspection
graphql-ws-client
.The following features are not currently supported, but may be one day.
Cynic is documented in a few places: