Minimal GraphQL client for Rust
There's also a wrapper client.query if there is no need to pass variables
```rust use gql_client::Client; use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
pub struct Data { user: User }
pub struct User { id: String, name: String }
pub struct Vars { id: u32 }
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box
let client = Client::new(endpoint);
let vars = Vars { id: 1 };
let data = client.query_with_vars::<Data, Vars>(query, vars).await.unwrap();
println!("Id: {}, Name: {}", data.user.id, data.user.name);
Ok(())
} ```
Client exposes newwithheaders function to pass headers using simple HashMap<&str, &str>
```rust use gql_client::Client; use std::collections::HashMap;
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box
let client = Client::new_with_headers(endpoint, headers);
Ok(())
} ```
There are two types of errors that can possibly occur. HTTP related errors (for example, authentication problem) or GraphQL query errors in JSON response. Debug, Display implementation of GraphQLError struct properly displays those error messages. Additionally, you can also look at JSON content for more detailed output by calling err.json()
```rust use gql_client::Client; use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
pub struct Data { user: User }
pub struct User { id: String, name: String }
pub struct Vars { id: u32 }
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box
// Send incorrect request
let query = r#"
query UserByIdQuery($id: ID!) {
user(id: $id) {
id1
name
}
}
"#;
let client = Client::new(endpoint);
let vars = Vars { id: 1 };
let error = client.query_with_vars::<Data, Vars>(query, vars).await.err();
println!("{:?}", error);
Ok(())
} ```