This is the official EdgeDB client library for JavaScript and TypeScript.
If you're just getting started with EdgeDB, we recommend going through the EdgeDB Quickstart first. This walks you through the process of installing EdgeDB, creating a simple schema, and writing some simple queries.
- Node.js 18+
- For TypeScript users:
- TypeScript 4.4+ is required
yarn add @types/node --dev
npm install edgedb # npm users
yarn add edgedb # yarn users
EdgeDB 2.x requires
v0.21.0
or later
The examples below demonstrate only the most fundamental use cases for this library. Go to the complete documentation site. >
A client is an instance of the Client
class, which maintains a pool of
connections to your database and provides methods for executing queries.
For TypeScript (and Node.js+ESM)
import * as edgedb from "edgedb";
const client = edgedb.createClient();
For Node.js (CommonJS)
const edgedb = require("edgedb");
const client = edgedb.createClient();
The call to edgedb.createClient()
doesn't require arguments, as the library
can determine how to connect to your database using the following mechanisms.
-
For local development: initialize a project with the
edgedb project init
command. As long as the file is within a project directory,createClient
will be able to auto-discover the connection information of the project's associated instance. For more information on projects, follow the Using projects guide. -
In production: configure the connection using environment variables. (This can also be used during local development if you prefer.) The easiest way is to set the
EDGEDB_DSN
variable; a DSN (also known as a "connection string") is a string of the formedgedb://USERNAME:PASSWORD@HOSTNAME:PORT/DATABASE
.
For advanced cases, see the DSN specification and Reference > Connection Parameters.
The remainder of the documentation assumes you are using ES module (
import
) syntax.
import * as edgedb from "edgedb";
const client = edgedb.createClient();
await client.query("select 2 + 2"); // => [4]
Note that the result is an array. The .query()
method always returns an
array, regardless of the result cardinality of your query. If your query
returns zero or one elements, use the .querySingle()
instead.
// empty set, zero elements
await client.querySingle("select <str>{}"); // => null
// one element
await client.querySingle("select 2 + 2"); // => 4
// one element
await client.querySingle(
`select Movie { title }
filter .id = <uuid>'2eb3bc76-a014-45dc-af66-2e6e8cc23e7e';`,
); // => { title: "Dune" }
Install the @edgedb/generate
package as a dev dependency to take advantage of EdgeDB's built-in code generators.
npm install @edgedb/generate --save-dev # npm users
yarn add @edgedb/generate --dev # yarn users
Then run a generator with the following command:
$ npx @edgedb/generate <generator> [FLAGS]
The following <generator>
s are currently supported:
queries
: Generate typed functions from*.edgeql
filesinterfaces
: Generate interfaces for your schema typesedgeql-js
: Generate the query builder
Run the following command to generate a source file for each *.edgeql
system in your project.
$ npx @edgedb/generate queries
Assume you have a file called getUser.edgeql
in your project directory.
// getUser.edgeql
select User {
name,
email
}
filter .email = <str>$email;
This generator will generate a getUser.query.ts
file alongside it that exports a function called getUser
.
import {createClient} from "edgedb";
import {myQuery} from "./myQuery.query";
const client = createClient();
const user = await myQuery(client, {name: "Timmy"});
user; // {name: string; email: string}
The first argument is a Client
, the second is the set of parameters. Both the parameters and the returned value are fully typed.
The query builder lets you write queries in a code-first way. It automatically infers the return type of your queries.
To generate the query builder, install the edgedb
package, initialize a project (if you haven't already), then run the following command:
$ npx @edgedb/generate edgeql-js
This will generate an EdgeQL query builder into the ./dbschema/edgeql-js
directory, as defined relative to your project root.
For details on generating the query builder, refer to the complete documentation. Below is a simple select
query as an example.
import { createClient } from "edgedb";
import e from "./dbschema/edgeql-js";
const client = createClient();
const query = e.select(e.Movie, (movie) => ({
id: true,
title: true,
actors: { name: true },
num_actors: e.count(movie.actors),
filter_single: e.op(movie.title, "=", "Dune"),
}));
const result = await query.run(client);
result.actors[0].name; // => Timothee Chalamet
For details on using the query builder, refer to the full query builder docs.
Contributing to this library requires a local installation of EdgeDB. Install EdgeDB from here or build it from source.
$ git clone [email protected]:edgedb/edgedb-js.git
$ cd edgedb-js
$ yarn # install dependencies
$ yarn run build # build all packages
$ yarn run test # run tests for all packages
In order to be able to run all tests you need to have
edgedb-server
in your path. This can be done by either running tests from within a Python 3.12 virtual environment (you will have it if you built EdgeDB locally), or by installing specific EdgeDB version and then adding its binary path to theEDGEDB_SERVER_BIN
environment variable. Check here to find how to get the binary path.
edgedb-js
is developed and distributed under the Apache 2.0 license.