You can describe it by using Population
Population is the process of automatically replacing the specified
paths in the document with document(s) from other collection(s). We
may populate a single document, multiple documents, plain object,
multiple plain objects, or all objects returned from a query.
Suppose your Event Schema is defined as follows:
var mongoose = require('mongoose')
, Schema = mongoose.Schema
var eventSchema = Schema({
title : String,
location : String,
startDate : Date,
endDate : Date
});
var personSchema = Schema({
firstname: String,
lastname: String,
email: String,
gender: {type: String, enum: ["Male", "Female"]}
dob: Date,
city: String,
interests: [interestsSchema],
eventsAttended: [{ type: Schema.Types.ObjectId, ref: 'Event' }]
});
var Event = mongoose.model('Event', eventSchema);
var Person = mongoose.model('Person', personSchema);
To show how populate is used, first create a person object, aaron = new Person({firstname: 'Aaron'})
and an event object, event1 = new Event({title: 'Hackathon', location: 'foo'})
:
aaron.eventsAttended.push(event1);
aaron.save(callback);
Then, when you make your query, you can populate references like this:
Person
.findOne({ firstname: 'Aaron' })
.populate('eventsAttended') // only works if we pushed refs to person.eventsAttended
.exec(function(err, person) {
if (err) return handleError(err);
console.log(person);
});
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