.. meta:: :description: Create relationships in Hasura :keywords: hasura, docs, schema, relationship, create .. _create_relationships: Creating relationships ====================== .. contents:: Table of contents :backlinks: none :depth: 2 :local: A relationship from one table/view to another can be created by defining a link between a column of the table/view to a column of the other table/view. Typically, relationships are defined using foreign-key constraints. But in some cases, it might not be possible to use foreign-key constraints to create the relation. For example, while trying to create a relationship involving a view as foreign-keys can't be created on views. .. _relationships-using-fkey: Using foreign keys ------------------ Say we created two tables, ``author(id, name)`` and ``article(id, title, content, rating, author_id)``. Let us now connect these tables to enable nested queries using a foreign-key: Step 1: Add foreign-key constraint ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In the console, navigate to the ``Modify`` tab of the ``article`` table. Click the ``Add`` button in the Foreign Keys section and configure the ``author_id`` column as a foreign-key for the ``id`` column in the ``author`` table: .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/schema/add-foreign-key.png :alt: Add foreign-key constraint Step 2: Create an object relationship ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Each article has one author. This is an ``object relationship``. The console infers this using the foreign-key created above and recommends the potential relationship in the ``Relationships`` tab of the ``article`` table. Add an ``object relationship`` named ``author`` for the ``article`` table as shown here: .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/schema/add-1-1-relationship.png :alt: Create an object relationship We can now run a nested object query that is based on this ``object relationship``. Fetch a list of articles and each article's author: .. graphiql:: :view_only: :query: query { article { id title author { id name } } } :response: { "data": { "article": [ { "id": 1, "title": "sit amet", "author": { "name": "Anjela", "id": 4 } }, { "id": 2, "title": "a nibh", "author": { "name": "Beltran", "id": 2 } }, { "id": 3, "title": "amet justo morbi", "author": { "name": "Anjela", "id": 4 } } ] } } Step 3: Create an array relationship ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ An author can write multiple articles. This is an ``array relationship``. You can add an ``array relationship`` in the same fashion as an ``object relationship`` as shown above. Add an ``array relationship`` named ``articles`` for the ``author`` table as shown here: .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/schema/add-1-many-relationship.png :alt: Create an array relationship We can now run a nested object query that is based on this ``array relationship``. Fetch a list of authors and a nested list of each author's articles: .. graphiql:: :view_only: :query: query { author { id name articles { id title } } } :response: { "data": { "author": [ { "id": 1, "name": "Justin", "articles": [ { "id": 15, "title": "vel dapibus at" }, { "id": 16, "title": "sem duis aliquam" } ] }, { "id": 2, "name": "Beltran", "articles": [ { "id": 2, "title": "a nibh" }, { "id": 9, "title": "sit amet" } ] }, { "id": 3, "name": "Sidney", "articles": [ { "id": 6, "title": "sapien ut" }, { "id": 11, "title": "turpis eget" }, { "id": 14, "title": "congue etiam justo" } ] } ] } } .. _create_manual_relationships: Using manual relationships -------------------------- Let's say you have a table ``author (id, name)`` and a view ``author_avg_rating (id, avg)`` which has the average rating of articles for each author. Let us now create an ``object relationship`` called ``avg_rating`` from the ``author`` table to the ``author_avg_rating`` view using a manual relationship: Step 1: Open the manual relationship section ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - Open the console and navigate to the ``Data -> author -> Relationships`` tab. - Click on the ``Configure`` button: .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/schema/manual-relationship-btn.png :alt: Open the manual relationship section Step 2: Define the relationship ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The above step will open up a section as shown below: .. thumbnail:: ../../../../img/graphql/manual/schema/manual-relationship-create.png :alt: Define the relationship In this case: - **Relationship Type** will be: ``Object Relationship`` - **Relationship Name** can be: ``avg_rating`` - **Reference** will be: ``id -> author_avg_rating . id`` *(similar to defining a foreign-key)* Step 3: Create the relationship ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Now click on the ``Save`` button to create the relationship. We can now run a nested object query that is based on this ``object relationship``. Fetch a list of authors with the average rating of their articles: .. graphiql:: :view_only: :query: query { author { id name avg_rating { avg } } } :response: { "data": { "author": [ { "id": 1, "name": "Justin", "avg_rating": { "avg": 2.5 } }, { "id": 2, "name": "Beltran", "avg_rating": { "avg": 3 } }, { "id": 3, "name": "Sidney", "avg_rating": { "avg": 2.6666666666666665 } } ] } }