subgraphs > Querying > Querying from an Application

Querying from an Application

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Learn how to query The Graph from your application.

Getting GraphQL Endpoint

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Once a subgraph is deployed to Subgraph Studio or Graph Explorer, you will be given the endpoint for your GraphQL API that should look something like this:

https://api.studio.thegraph.com/query/<ID>/<SUBGRAPH_NAME>/<VERSION>
https://gateway.thegraph.com/api/<API_KEY>/subgraphs/id/<SUBGRAPH_ID>

With your GraphQL endpoint, you can use various GraphQL Client libraries to query the subgraph and populate your app with data indexed by the subgraph.

The Graph is providing its own GraphQL client, graph-client that supports unique features such as:

  • Cross-chain Subgraph Handling: Querying from multiple subgraphs in a single query
  • Automatic Block Tracking
  • Automatic Pagination
  • Fully typed result

Note: graph-client is integrated with other popular GraphQL clients such as Apollo and URQL, which are compatible with environments such as React, Angular, Node.js, and React Native. As a result, using graph-client will provide you with an enhanced experience for working with The Graph.

Fetch Data with Graph Client

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Let's look at how to fetch data from a subgraph with graph-client:

Install The Graph Client CLI in your project:

yarn add -D @graphprotocol/client-cli
# or, with NPM:
npm install --save-dev @graphprotocol/client-cli

Define your query in a .graphql file (or inlined in your .js or .ts file):

query ExampleQuery {
# this one is coming from compound-v2
markets(first: 7) {
borrowRate
cash
collateralFactor
}
# this one is coming from uniswap-v2
pair(id: "0x00004ee988665cdda9a1080d5792cecd16dc1220") {
id
token0 {
id
symbol
name
}
token1 {
id
symbol
name
}
}
}

Create a configuration file (called .graphclientrc.yml) and point to your GraphQL endpoints provided by The Graph, for example:

# .graphclientrc.yml
sources:
- name: uniswapv2
handler:
graphql:
endpoint: https://api.thegraph.com/subgraphs/name/uniswap/uniswap-v2
- name: compoundv2
handler:
graphql:
endpoint: https://api.thegraph.com/subgraphs/name/graphprotocol/compound-v2
documents:
- ./src/example-query.graphql

Run the following The Graph Client CLI command to generate typed and ready to use JavaScript code:

graphclient build

Update your .ts file to use the generated typed GraphQL documents:

import React, { useEffect } from 'react'
// ...
// we import types and typed-graphql document from the generated code (`..graphclient/`)
import { ExampleQueryDocument, ExampleQueryQuery, execute } from '../.graphclient'
function App() {
const [data, setData] = React.useState<ExampleQueryQuery>()
useEffect(() => {
execute(ExampleQueryDocument, {}).then((result) => {
setData(result?.data)
})
}, [setData])
return (
<div className="App">
<header className="App-header">
<img src={logo} className="App-logo" alt="logo" />
<p>Graph Client Example</p>
<fieldset>
{data && (
<form>
<label>Data</label>
<br />
<textarea value={JSON.stringify(data, null, 2)} readOnly rows={25} />
</form>
)}
</fieldset>
</header>
</div>
)
}
export default App

Important Note: graph-client is perfectly integrated with other GraphQL clients such as Apollo client, URQL, or React Query; you can find examples in the official repository. However, if you choose to go with another client, keep in mind that you won't be able to use Cross-chain Subgraph Handling or Automatic Pagination, which are core features for querying The Graph.

Apollo client is a common GraphQL client on front-end ecosystems. It's available for React, Angular, Vue, Ember, iOS, and Android.

Although it's the heaviest client, it has many features to build advanced UI on top of GraphQL:

  • Advanced error handling
  • Пагинация
  • Data prefetching
  • Optimistic UI
  • Local state management

Fetch Data with Apollo Client

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Let's look at how to fetch data from a subgraph with Apollo client:

Install @apollo/client and graphql:

npm install @apollo/client graphql

Query the API with the following code:

import { ApolloClient, InMemoryCache, gql } from '@apollo/client'
const APIURL = 'https://api.studio.thegraph.com/query//<SUBGRAPH_NAME>/'
const tokensQuery = `
query {
tokens {
id
tokenID
contentURI
metadataURI
}
}
`
const client = new ApolloClient({
uri: APIURL,
cache: new InMemoryCache(),
})
client
.query({
query: gql(tokensQuery),
})
.then((data) => console.log('Subgraph data: ', data))
.catch((err) => {
console.log('Error fetching data: ', err)
})

To use variables, you can pass in a variables argument to the query:

const tokensQuery = `
query($first: Int, $orderBy: BigInt, $orderDirection: String) {
tokens(
first: $first, orderBy: $orderBy, orderDirection: $orderDirection
) {
id
tokenID
contentURI
metadataURI
}
}
`
client
.query({
query: gql(tokensQuery),
variables: {
first: 10,
orderBy: 'createdAtTimestamp',
orderDirection: 'desc',
},
})
.then((data) => console.log('Subgraph data: ', data))
.catch((err) => {
console.log('Error fetching data: ', err)
})

URQL is available within Node.js, React/Preact, Vue, and Svelte environments, with some more advanced features:

  • Flexible cache system
  • Extensible design (easing adding new capabilities on top of it)
  • Lightweight bundle (~5x lighter than Apollo Client)
  • Support for file uploads and offline mode

Let's look at how to fetch data from a subgraph with URQL:

Install urql and graphql:

npm install urql graphql

Query the API with the following code:

import { createClient } from 'urql'
const APIURL = 'https://api.thegraph.com/subgraphs/name/username/subgraphname'
const tokensQuery = `
query {
tokens {
id
tokenID
contentURI
metadataURI
}
}
`
const client = createClient({
url: APIURL,
})
const data = await client.query(tokensQuery).toPromise()
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