Files
wiki/convex
Wayne Sutton 8d28e36458 feat(stats): switch to aggregate component for O(log n) counts
- Add @convex-dev/aggregate package for efficient aggregation
- Update convex.config.ts with pageViewsByPath, totalPageViews, uniqueVisitors aggregates
- Update recordPageView to insert into aggregate components
- Update getStats to use aggregate counts instead of O(n) table scans
- Add backfillAggregates internal mutation for existing data
- Update prds/howstatsworks.md with old vs new comparison
- Update changelog.md with v1.11.0 entry
- Update files.md with aggregate component info
2025-12-20 14:39:53 -08:00
..

Welcome to your Convex functions directory!

Write your Convex functions here. See https://docs.convex.dev/functions for more.

A query function that takes two arguments looks like:

// convex/myFunctions.ts
import { query } from "./_generated/server";
import { v } from "convex/values";

export const myQueryFunction = query({
  // Validators for arguments.
  args: {
    first: v.number(),
    second: v.string(),
  },

  // Function implementation.
  handler: async (ctx, args) => {
    // Read the database as many times as you need here.
    // See https://docs.convex.dev/database/reading-data.
    const documents = await ctx.db.query("tablename").collect();

    // Arguments passed from the client are properties of the args object.
    console.log(args.first, args.second);

    // Write arbitrary JavaScript here: filter, aggregate, build derived data,
    // remove non-public properties, or create new objects.
    return documents;
  },
});

Using this query function in a React component looks like:

const data = useQuery(api.myFunctions.myQueryFunction, {
  first: 10,
  second: "hello",
});

A mutation function looks like:

// convex/myFunctions.ts
import { mutation } from "./_generated/server";
import { v } from "convex/values";

export const myMutationFunction = mutation({
  // Validators for arguments.
  args: {
    first: v.string(),
    second: v.string(),
  },

  // Function implementation.
  handler: async (ctx, args) => {
    // Insert or modify documents in the database here.
    // Mutations can also read from the database like queries.
    // See https://docs.convex.dev/database/writing-data.
    const message = { body: args.first, author: args.second };
    const id = await ctx.db.insert("messages", message);

    // Optionally, return a value from your mutation.
    return await ctx.db.get("messages", id);
  },
});

Using this mutation function in a React component looks like:

const mutation = useMutation(api.myFunctions.myMutationFunction);
function handleButtonPress() {
  // fire and forget, the most common way to use mutations
  mutation({ first: "Hello!", second: "me" });
  // OR
  // use the result once the mutation has completed
  mutation({ first: "Hello!", second: "me" }).then((result) =>
    console.log(result),
  );
}

Use the Convex CLI to push your functions to a deployment. See everything the Convex CLI can do by running npx convex -h in your project root directory. To learn more, launch the docs with npx convex docs.