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Mongoose for Application Development

You're reading from   Mongoose for Application Development Mongoose streamlines application development on the Node.js stack and this book is the ideal guide to both the concepts and practical application. From connecting to a database to re-usable plugins, it's all here.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782168195
Length 142 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Simon Holmes Simon Holmes
Author Profile Icon Simon Holmes
Simon Holmes
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Mongoose for Application Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Introducing Mongoose to the Technology Stack 2. Establishing a Database Connection FREE CHAPTER 3. Schemas and Models 4. Interacting with Data – an Introduction 5. Interacting with Data – Creation 6. Interacting with Data – Reading, Querying, and Finding 7. Interacting with Data – Updating 8. Interacting with Data – Deleting 9. Validating Data 10. Complex Schemas 11. Plugins – Re-using Code Index

Population – references to other collections


MongoDB and Mongoose do not support JOIN commands as MongoDB is not a relational database. Mongoose gives you an elegant way to achieve similar functionality by using population.

Note

The concept of Population was dramatically expanded upon in Version 3.6 of Mongoose. Older versions won't support everything referenced in this chapter.

Population works by pulling information into the model you're currently using from a second model. Unlike JOIN statements, these are actually separate queries. First you retrieve your primary set of data from a collection, and once that is returned, you "populate" the required data from a secondary collection. We'll see this in some code very soon.

Defining data for population

The first step to setting up population is in the schema. Your primary schema links to the referenced model by passing an object containing the name of the model to be used and the SchemaType of the linked schema object.

In our application, there...

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