Interfaces

An Interface is an abstract type that defines a certain set of fields that a type must include to implement the interface.

For example, you can define an Interface Character that represents any character in the Star Wars trilogy:

import graphene

class Character(graphene.Interface):
    id = graphene.ID(required=True)
    name = graphene.String(required=True)
    friends = graphene.List(lambda: Character)

Any ObjectType that implements Character will have these exact fields, with these arguments and return types.

For example, here are some types that might implement Character:

class Human(graphene.ObjectType):
    class Meta:
        interfaces = (Character, )

    starships = graphene.List(Starship)
    home_planet = graphene.String()

class Droid(graphene.ObjectType):
    class Meta:
        interfaces = (Character, )

    primary_function = graphene.String()

Both of these types have all of the fields from the Character interface, but also bring in extra fields, home_planet, starships and primary_function, that are specific to that particular type of character.

The full GraphQL schema definition will look like this:

interface Character {
    id: ID!
    name: String!
    friends: [Character]
}

type Human implements Character {
    id: ID!
    name: String!
    friends: [Character]
    starships: [Starship]
    homePlanet: String
}

type Droid implements Character {
    id: ID!
    name: String!
    friends: [Character]
    primaryFunction: String
}

Interfaces are useful when you want to return an object or set of objects, which might be of several different types.

For example, you can define a field hero that resolves to any Character, depending on the episode, like this:

class Query(graphene.ObjectType):
    hero = graphene.Field(
        Character,
        required=True,
        episode=graphene.Int(required=True)
    )

    def resolve_hero(root, info, episode):
        # Luke is the hero of Episode V
        if episode == 5:
            return get_human(name='Luke Skywalker')
        return get_droid(name='R2-D2')

schema = graphene.Schema(query=Query, types=[Human, Droid])

This allows you to directly query for fields that exist on the Character interface as well as selecting specific fields on any type that implements the interface using inline fragments.

For example, the following query:

query HeroForEpisode($episode: Int!) {
    hero(episode: $episode) {
        __typename
        name
        ... on Droid {
            primaryFunction
        }
        ... on Human {
            homePlanet
        }
    }
}

Will return the following data with variables { "episode": 4 }:

{
    "data": {
        "hero": {
            "__typename": "Droid",
            "name": "R2-D2",
            "primaryFunction": "Astromech"
        }
    }
}

And different data with the variables { "episode": 5 }:

{
    "data": {
        "hero": {
            "__typename": "Human",
            "name": "Luke Skywalker",
            "homePlanet": "Tatooine"
        }
    }
}

Resolving data objects to types

As you build out your schema in Graphene it’s common for your resolvers to return objects that represent the data backing your GraphQL types rather than instances of the Graphene types (e.g. Django or SQLAlchemy models). This works well with ObjectType and Scalar fields, however when you start using Interfaces you might come across this error:

"Abstract type Character must resolve to an Object type at runtime for field Query.hero ..."

This happens because Graphene doesn’t have enough information to convert the data object into a Graphene type needed to resolve the Interface. To solve this you can define a resolve_type class method on the Interface which maps a data object to a Graphene type:

class Character(graphene.Interface):
    id = graphene.ID(required=True)
    name = graphene.String(required=True)

    @classmethod
    def resolve_type(cls, instance, info):
        if instance.type == 'DROID':
            return Droid
        return Human