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Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

By : Grebe
3.9 (8)
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Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

Full-Stack Web Development with GraphQL and React

3.9 (8)
By: Grebe

Overview of this book

React and GraphQL, when combined, provide you with a very dynamic, efficient, and stable tech stack to build web-based applications. GraphQL is a modern solution for querying an API that represents an alternative to REST and is the next evolution in web development. This book guides you in creating a full-stack web application from scratch using modern web technologies such as Apollo, Express.js, Node.js, and React. First, you’ll start by configuring and setting up your development environment. Next, the book demonstrates how to solve complex problems with GraphQL, such as abstracting multi-table database architectures and handling image uploads using Sequelize. You’ll then build a complete Graphbook from scratch. While doing so, you’ll cover the tricky parts of connecting React to the backend, and maintaining and synchronizing state. In addition to this, you’ll also learn how to write Reusable React components and use React Hooks. Later chapters will guide you through querying data and authenticating users in order to enable user privacy. Finally, you’ll explore how to deploy your application on AWS and ensure continuous deployment using Docker and CircleCI. By the end of this web development book, you'll have learned how to build and deploy scalable full-stack applications with ease using React and GraphQL.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Building the Stack
5
Section 2: Building the Application
14
Section 3: Preparing for Deployment

Writing database models

After creating a connection to our MySQL server via Sequelize, we want to use it. However, our database is missing a table or structure that we can query or manipulate. Creating those is the next thing that we need to do.

Currently, we have two GraphQL entities: User and Post.

Sequelize lets us create a database schema for each of our GraphQL entities. The schema is validated when we insert or update rows in our database. We already wrote a schema for GraphQL in the schema.js file, which is used by Apollo Server, but we need to create a second one for our database. The field types, as well as the fields themselves, can vary between the database and the GraphQL schema.

GraphQL schemas can have more fields than our database model, or vice versa. Perhaps you do not want to export all the data from your database through the API, or maybe you want to generate data for your GraphQL API on the fly when you're requesting data.

Let's create the...

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