Samuel Imolorhe is an independent developer best known for Altair GraphQL Client, a cross-platform desktop application that streamlines the design, testing, and documentation of GraphQL APIs. Built with Electron and released under the permissive MIT license, Altair presents a single-window workspace where engineers can compose queries and mutations with auto-completion, inspect real-time server schemas via introspection, organize recurring operations into collections, and visualize response payloads through collapsible JSON trees. Headers, variables, and pre-request scripts are handled in dedicated panes, while a built-in GraphQL formatter and syntax validator reduce manual errors. The client supports file uploads, subscription websockets, OAuth 2.0, and can export query history to Markdown or cURL for regression testing or onboarding documentation. Typical use cases range from frontend teams iterating against a headless CMS backend to DevOps engineers smoke-testing micro-service endpoints during CI pipelines, and from open-source contributors exploring public GraphQL APIs to enterprise architects documenting internal federated graphs. Portable builds for Windows, macOS, and Linux make it easy to keep the same toolchain across development, staging, and production environments, and community plugins extend the core with themes, cloud-sync, and linter rules. Samuel Imolorhe’s Altair GraphQL Client is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always install the latest version, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.
A beautiful feature-rich GraphQL Client for all platforms.
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