When I first saw GraphQL, I was like "This is some overengineered shit that is going to be the next cargo cult"
Then I got actual exposure to it, and I think it's amazing in certain scenarios. You can easily make CRUD apps that allow a front-end to pick which database rows you want to update, and you create a metadata file that describes the database and applies permissions.
You get so many things for free, and the result is you have far less code to write and fewer bugs, especially around RBAC.
That being said, like many technologies, there will be people that try to use it for things it shouldn't be used for.
What do you think is the reason for this? Is it maybe something along the line "If company X uses it, and they are big, this standard / technology will for sure stay here some time"?
Compared to REST APIs, I like how it eliminates the coarse-grained vs. fine-grained decision for designing queries in APIs. You can just spec out the model and let the clients decide what they need.
https://memgraph.com/blog/graph-database-query-languages-you...