Skip to main content
Version: v22

Scalars in GraphQL

Scalars

The leaf nodes of the GraphQL type system are called scalars. Once you reach a scalar type, you cannot descend any further into the type hierarchy. A scalar type is meant to represent an indivisible value.

The GraphQL specification states that all implementations must have the following scalar types:

  • String aka GraphQLString - A UTF‐8 character sequence.
  • Boolean aka GraphQLBoolean - true or false.
  • Int aka GraphQLInt - A signed 32‐bit integer.
  • Float aka GraphQLFloat - A signed double-precision floating-point value.
  • ID aka GraphQLID - A unique identifier which is serialized in the same way as a String. However, defining it as an ID signifies that it is not intended to be human‐readable.

The class graphql.Scalars contains singleton instances of the provided scalar types.

graphql-java-extended-scalars adds many more scalars, including the following which are useful in Java based systems:

  • Long aka GraphQLLong - a java.lang.Long based scalar
  • Short aka GraphQLShort - a java.lang.Short based scalar
  • Byte aka GraphQLByte - a java.lang.Byte based scalar
  • BigDecimal aka GraphQLBigDecimal - a java.math.BigDecimal based scalar
  • BigInteger aka GraphQLBigInteger - a java.math.BigInteger based scalar

See the documentation for how to use Extended Scalars.

Writing your own Custom Scalars

If the scalar you want isn't in a library, you can also write your own custom scalar implementation. In doing so you take on the responsibility for coercing values at runtime, which we will explain in a moment.

Imagine we decide we need to have an email scalar type. It will take email addresses as input and output.

We would create a singleton graphql.schema.GraphQLScalarType instance for this.

public static final GraphQLScalarType EMAIL = GraphQLScalarType.newScalar()
.name("email")
.description("A custom scalar that handles emails")
.coercing(new Coercing() {
@Override
public Object serialize(Object dataFetcherResult, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return serializeEmail(dataFetcherResult);
}

@Override
public Object parseValue(Object input, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return parseEmailFromVariable(input);
}

@Override
public Object parseLiteral(Value input, CoercedVariables variables, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return parseEmailFromAstLiteral(input);
}
})
.build();

Coercing values

The real work in any custom scalar implementation is the graphql.schema.Coercing implementation. This is responsible for 3 functions:

  • parseValue - takes a variable input object and converts into the Java runtime representation
  • parseLiteral - takes an AST literal graphql.language.Value as input and converts into the Java runtime representation
  • serialize - takes a Java object and converts it into the output shape for that scalar

So your custom scalar code has to handle 2 forms of input (parseValue / parseLiteral) and 1 form of output (serialize).

Imagine this query, which uses variables, AST literals and outputs our scalar type email.

mutation Contact($mainContact: Email!) {
makeContact(mainContactEmail: $mainContact, backupContactEmail: "backup@company.com") {
id
mainContactEmail
}
}

Our custom Email scalar will:

  • be called via parseValue to convert the $mainContact variable value into a runtime object
  • be called via parseLiteral to convert the AST graphql.language.StringValue "backup@company.com" into a runtime object
  • be called via serialize to turn the runtime representation of mainContactEmail into a form ready for output

Validation of input and output

The methods can validate that the received input makes sense. For example our email scalar will try to validate that the input and output are indeed email addresses.

The JavaDoc method contract of graphql.schema.Coercing says the following:

  • The serialize MUST ONLY allow graphql.schema.CoercingSerializeException to be thrown from it. This indicates that the value cannot be serialized into an appropriate form. You must not allow other runtime exceptions to escape this method to get the normal graphql behaviour for validation.

  • The parseValue MUST ONLY allow graphql.schema.CoercingParseValueException to be thrown from it. This indicates that the value cannot be parsed as input into an appropriate form. You must not allow other runtime exceptions to escape this method to get the normal graphql behaviour for validation.

  • The parseLiteral MUST ONLY allow graphql.schema.CoercingParseLiteralException to be thrown from it. This indicates that the AST value cannot be parsed as input into an appropriate form. You must not allow any runtime exceptions to escape this method to get the normal graphql behaviour for validation.

Some people try to rely on runtime exceptions for validation and hope that they come out as graphql errors. This is not the case. You MUST follow the Coercing method contracts to allow the graphql-java engine to work according to the graphql specification on scalar types.

Example implementation

The following is a really rough implementation of our imagined email scalar type to show you how one might implement the Coercing methods.

public static class EmailScalar {

public static final GraphQLScalarType EMAIL = GraphQLScalarType.newScalar()
.name("email")
.description("A custom scalar that handles emails")
.coercing(new Coercing() {
@Override
public Object serialize(Object dataFetcherResult, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return serializeEmail(dataFetcherResult);
}

@Override
public Object parseValue(Object input, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return parseEmailFromVariable(input);
}

@Override
public Object parseLiteral(Value input, CoercedVariables variables, GraphQLContext graphQLContext, Locale locale) {
return parseEmailFromAstLiteral(input);
}
})
.build();

private static boolean looksLikeAnEmailAddress(String possibleEmailValue) {
// ps. I am not trying to replicate RFC-3696 clearly
return Pattern.matches("[A-Za-z0-9]@[.*]", possibleEmailValue);
}

private static Object serializeEmail(Object dataFetcherResult) {
String possibleEmailValue = String.valueOf(dataFetcherResult);
if (looksLikeAnEmailAddress(possibleEmailValue)) {
return possibleEmailValue;
} else {
throw new CoercingSerializeException("Unable to serialize " + possibleEmailValue + " as an email address");
}
}

private static Object parseEmailFromVariable(Object input) {
if (input instanceof String) {
String possibleEmailValue = input.toString();
if (looksLikeAnEmailAddress(possibleEmailValue)) {
return possibleEmailValue;
}
}
throw new CoercingParseValueException("Unable to parse variable value " + input + " as an email address");
}

private static Object parseEmailFromAstLiteral(Object input) {
if (input instanceof StringValue) {
String possibleEmailValue = ((StringValue) input).getValue();
if (looksLikeAnEmailAddress(possibleEmailValue)) {
return possibleEmailValue;
}
}
throw new CoercingParseLiteralException(
"Value is not any email address : '" + String.valueOf(input) + "'"
);
}
}