apollographql

graphql-schema

5
1
# Install this skill:
npx skills add apollographql/skills --skill "graphql-schema"

Install specific skill from multi-skill repository

# Description

>

# SKILL.md


name: graphql-schema
description: >
Guide for designing GraphQL schemas following industry best practices. Use this skill when:
(1) designing a new GraphQL schema or API,
(2) reviewing existing schema for improvements,
(3) deciding on type structures or nullability,
(4) implementing pagination or error patterns,
(5) ensuring security in schema design.
license: MIT
compatibility: Any GraphQL implementation (Apollo Server, graphql-js, Yoga, etc.)
metadata:
author: apollographql
version: "1.0"
allowed-tools: Bash(npm:) Bash(npx:) Read Write Edit Glob Grep


GraphQL Schema Design Guide

This guide covers best practices for designing GraphQL schemas that are intuitive, performant, and maintainable. Schema design is primarily a server-side concern that directly impacts API usability.

Schema Design Principles

1. Design for Client Needs

  • Think about what queries clients will write
  • Organize types around use cases, not database tables
  • Expose capabilities, not implementation details

2. Be Explicit

  • Use clear, descriptive names
  • Make nullability intentional
  • Document with descriptions

3. Design for Evolution

  • Plan for backwards compatibility
  • Use deprecation before removal
  • Avoid breaking changes

Quick Reference

Type Definition Syntax

"""
A user in the system.
"""
type User {
  id: ID!
  email: String!
  name: String
  posts(first: Int = 10, after: String): PostConnection!
  createdAt: DateTime!
}

Nullability Rules

Pattern Meaning
String Nullable - may be null
String! Non-null - always has value
[String] Nullable list, nullable items
[String!] Nullable list, non-null items
[String]! Non-null list, nullable items
[String!]! Non-null list, non-null items

Best Practice: Use [Type!]! for lists - empty list over null, no null items.

Input vs Output Types

# Output type - what clients receive
type User {
  id: ID!
  email: String!
  createdAt: DateTime!
}

# Input type - what clients send
input CreateUserInput {
  email: String!
  name: String
}

# Mutation using input type
type Mutation {
  createUser(input: CreateUserInput!): User!
}

Interface Pattern

interface Node {
  id: ID!
}

type User implements Node {
  id: ID!
  email: String!
}

type Post implements Node {
  id: ID!
  title: String!
}

Union Pattern

union SearchResult = User | Post | Comment

type Query {
  search(query: String!): [SearchResult!]!
}

Reference Files

Detailed documentation for specific topics:

  • Types - Type design patterns, interfaces, unions, and custom scalars
  • Naming - Naming conventions for types, fields, and arguments
  • Pagination - Connection pattern and cursor-based pagination
  • Errors - Error modeling and result types
  • Security - Security best practices for schema design

Key Rules

Type Design

  • Define types based on domain concepts, not data storage
  • Use interfaces for shared fields across types
  • Use unions for mutually exclusive types
  • Keep types focused (single responsibility)
  • Avoid deep nesting - flatten when possible

Field Design

  • Fields should be named from client's perspective
  • Return the most specific type possible
  • Make expensive fields explicit (consider arguments)
  • Use arguments for filtering, sorting, pagination

Mutation Design

  • Use single input argument pattern: mutation(input: InputType!)
  • Return affected objects in mutation responses
  • Model mutations around business operations, not CRUD
  • Consider returning a union of success/error types

ID Strategy

  • Use globally unique IDs when possible
  • Implement Node interface for refetchability
  • Base64-encode compound IDs if needed

Ground Rules

  • ALWAYS add descriptions to types and fields
  • ALWAYS use non-null (!) for fields that cannot be null
  • ALWAYS use [Type!]! pattern for lists
  • NEVER expose database internals in schema
  • NEVER break backwards compatibility without deprecation
  • PREFER dedicated input types over many arguments
  • PREFER enums over arbitrary strings for fixed values
  • USE ID type for identifiers, not String or Int
  • USE custom scalars for domain-specific values (DateTime, Email, URL)

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.