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Nest.js: A Progressive Node.js Framework

You're reading from   Nest.js: A Progressive Node.js Framework Hit the ground running with Nest.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800204737
Length 317 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (6):
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Greg Magolan Greg Magolan
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Greg Magolan
Patrick Housley Patrick Housley
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Patrick Housley
Backstop Media LLC Backstop Media LLC
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Backstop Media LLC
Adrien de Peretti Adrien de Peretti
Author Profile Icon Adrien de Peretti
Adrien de Peretti
Jay Bell Jay Bell
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Jay Bell
David Guijarro David Guijarro
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David Guijarro
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface
1. Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. Overview 3. Nest.js authentication 4. Dependency Injection system of Nest.js 5. TypeORM 6. Sequelize 7. Mongoose 8. Web sockets 9. Microservices 10. Routing and request handling in Nest.js 11. OpenAPI (Swagger) Specification 12. Command Query Responsibility Separation (CQRS) 13. Architecture 14. Testing 15. Server-side Rendering with Angular Universal

Injecting a model into a service

Our first User model is now setup. Of course, we will have to inject it into a service or even a controller. To inject a model anywhere else, we must first create the appropriate provider in order to give it to the module.

This provider will define the key to use in order to inject it and take as a value the User model that we have implemented before.

export const userProvider = {
    provide: 'UserRepository',
    useValue: User
};

To inject it in into a service we will use the @Inject() decorator, which can take the string defined in the previous example UserRepository.

@Injectable()
export class UserService implements IUserService {
    constructor(@Inject('UserRepository') private readonly UserRepository: typeof User) { }
    ...
}

After injecting the model into the service, you will be able to use it to access and manipulate the data as you want. For example, you can execute this.UserRepository.findAll() to register the data...

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