--description--
In the good old days, this was what you needed to do if you wanted to edit a document, and be able to use it somehow (e.g. sending it back in a server response). Mongoose has a dedicated updating method: Model.update()
. It is bound to the low-level mongo driver. It can bulk-edit many documents matching certain criteria, but it doesn’t send back the updated document, only a 'status' message. Furthermore, it makes model validations difficult, because it just directly calls the mongo driver.
--instructions--
Modify the findEditThenSave
function to find a person by _id
(use any of the above methods) with the parameter personId
as search key. Add "hamburger"
to the list of the person's favoriteFoods
(you can use Array.push()
). Then - inside the find callback - save()
the updated Person
.
Note: This may be tricky, if in your Schema, you declared favoriteFoods
as an Array, without specifying the type (i.e. [String]
). In that case, favoriteFoods
defaults to Mixed type, and you have to manually mark it as edited using document.markModified('edited-field')
. See our Mongoose article.
--hints--
Find-edit-update an item should succeed
(getUserInput) =>
$.post(getUserInput('url') + '/_api/find-edit-save', {
name: 'Poldo',
age: 40,
favoriteFoods: ['spaghetti']
}).then(
(data) => {
assert.equal(data.name, 'Poldo', 'item.name is not what is expected');
assert.equal(data.age, 40, 'item.age is not what expected');
assert.deepEqual(
data.favoriteFoods,
['spaghetti', 'hamburger'],
'item.favoriteFoods is not what expected'
);
assert.equal(data.__v, 1, 'The item should be previously edited');
},
(xhr) => {
throw new Error(xhr.responseText);
}
);