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@typegoose/typegoose
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Define Mongoose models using TypeScript classes.
import { prop, getModelForClass } from '@typegoose/typegoose';
import * as mongoose from 'mongoose';
class User {
@prop()
name?: string;
}
const UserModel = getModelForClass(User);
// UserModel is a regular Mongoose Model with correct types
(async () => {
await mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost:27017/test', { useNewUrlParser: true });
const { _id: id } = await UserModel.create({ name: 'JohnDoe' });
const user = await UserModel.findById(id).exec();
console.log(user);
// prints { _id: 59218f686409d670a97e53e0, name: 'JohnDoe', __v: 0 }
})();
A common problem when using Mongoose with TypeScript is that you have to define both the Mongoose model and the TypeScript interface. If the model changes, you also have to keep the TypeScript interface file in sync or the TypeScript interface would not represent the real data structure of the model.
Typegoose aims to solve this problem by defining only a TypeScript interface (class) which need to be enhanced with special Typegoose decorators.
Under the hood it uses the Reflect & reflect-metadata API to retrieve the types of the properties, so redundancy can be significantly reduced.
Instead of:
interface Car {
model?: string;
}
interface Job {
title?: string;
position?: string;
}
interface User {
name?: string;
age: number;
job?: Job;
car: Car | string;
}
mongoose.model('User', {
name: String,
age: { type: Number, required: true },
job: {
title: String;
position: String;
},
car: { type: Schema.Types.ObjectId, ref: 'Car' }
});
mongoose.model('Car', {
model: string,
});
You can just:
class Job {
@prop()
title?: string;
@prop()
position?: string;
}
class Car {
@prop()
model?: string;
}
class User {
@prop()
name?: string;
@prop({ required: true })
age!: number;
@prop()
job?: Job;
@prop({ ref: Car })
car?: Ref<Car>;
}
Please note that sub documents do not have to extend Typegoose. You can still give them default value in prop
decorator, but you can't create static or instance methods on them.
emitDecoratorMetadata
and experimentalDecorators
must be enabled in tsconfig.json
npm i -s @typegoose/typegoose
You also need to install mongoose
, since version 5 it is listed as a peer-dependency
npm i -s mongoose
npm test
Major.Minor.Fix
(or how npm expresses it Major.Minor.Patch
)
(This Project should comply with Semver)
To ask questions or just talk with us join our Discord Server
Since 6.0.0 deprecated, please try to remove it
getModelForClass<T>(cl: T)
This method returns the corresponding Mongoose Model for the class (T
). If no Mongoose model exists for this class yet, one will be created automatically (by calling the method setModelForClass
).
setModelForClass<T>(cl: T)
This Method is Deprecated see Migrate to 6.0.0
Typegoose comes with TypeScript decorators, which responsibility is to connect the Mongoose schema behind the TypeScript class.
The prop
decorator adds the target class property to the Mongoose schema as a property. Typegoose checks the decorated property's type and sets the schema property accordingly. If another Typegoose extending class is given as the type, Typegoose will recognize this property as a sub document.
The options
object accepts multiple config properties:
required
: Just like the Mongoose required
it accepts a handful of parameters. Please note that it's the developer's responsibility to make sure that
if required
is set to false
then the class property should be optional.
Note: for coding style (and type completion) you should use !
when it is marked as required
// this is now required in the schema
@prop({ required: true })
firstName!: string;
// by default, a property is not required
@prop()
lastName?: string; // using the ? optional property
index
: Tells Mongoose whether to define an index for the property.
@prop({ index: true })
indexedField?: string;
unique
: Just like the Mongoose unique, tells Mongoose to ensure a unique index is created for this path.
// this field is now unique across the collection
@prop({ unique: true })
uniqueId?: string;
enum
: The enum option accepts a string array. The class property which gets this decorator should have an enum-like type which values are from the provided string array. The way how the enum is created is delegated to the developer, Typegoose needs a string array which hold the enum values, and a TypeScript type which tells the possible values of the enum.
However, if you use TS 2.4+, you can use string enum as well.
enum Gender {
MALE = 'male',
FEMALE = 'female',
}
@prop({ enum: Gender })
gender?: Gender;
lowercase
: for strings only; whether to always call .toLowerCase() on the value.
@prop({ lowercase: true })
nickName?: string;
uppercase
: for strings only; whether to always call .toUpperCase() on the value.
@prop({ uppercase: true })
nickName?: string;
trim
: for strings only; whether to always call .trim() on the value.
@prop({ trim: true })
nickName?: string;
default
: The provided value will be the default for that Mongoose property.
@prop({ default: 'Nick' })
nickName?: string;
_id
: When false, no _id is added to the subdocument
class Car {}
@prop({ _id: false })
car?: Car;
ref
: By adding the ref
option with another Typegoose class as value, a Mongoose reference property will be created. The type of the property on the Typegoose extending class should be Ref<T>
(see Types section).
class Car {}
@prop({ ref: Car })
car?: Ref<Car>;
refPath
: Is the same as ref
, only that it looks at the path specified, and this path decides which model to use
class Car {}
class Shop {}
// in another class
class Another {
@prop({ required: true, enum: 'Car' | 'Shop' })
which!: string;
@prop({ refPath: 'which' })
kind?: Ref<Car | Shop>;
}
min
/ max
(numeric validators): Same as Mongoose numberic validators.
@prop({ min: 10, max: 21 })
age?: number;
minlength
/ maxlength
/ match
(string validators): Same as Mongoose string validators.
@prop({ minlength: 5, maxlength: 10, match: /[0-9a-f]*/ })
favouriteHexNumber?: string;
validate
(custom validators): You can define your own validator function/regex using this. The function has to return a boolean
or a Promise (async validation).
// you have to get your own `isEmail` function, this is a placeholder
@prop({ validate: (value) => isEmail(value)})
email?: string;
// or
@prop({ validate: async (value) => { await isEmail(value) })
email?: string;
// or
@prop({ validate: {
validator: val => isEmail(val),
message: `{VALUE} is not a valid email`
}})
email?: string;
// or
@prop({ validate: /\S+@\S+\.\S+/ })
email?: string;
// you can also use multiple validators in an array.
@prop({ validate:
[
{
validator: val => isEmail(val),
message: `{VALUE} is not a valid email`
},
{
validator: val => isBlacklisted(val),
message: `{VALUE} is blacklisted`
}
]
})
email?: string;
alias
(alias): Same as Mongoose Alias, only difference is the extra property for type completion
class Dummy {
@prop({ alias: "helloWorld" })
public hello: string; // will be included in the DB
public helloWorld: string; // will NOT be included in the DB, just for type completion (gets passed as hello in the DB)
}
Mongoose gives developers the option to create virtual properties. This means that actual database read/write will not occur these are just 'calculated properties'. A virtual property can have a setter and a getter. TypeScript also has a similar feature which Typegoose uses for virtual property definitions (using the prop
decorator).
example:
class Name {
@prop()
firstName?: string;
@prop()
lastName?: string;
// this will create a virtual property called 'fullName'
get fullName() {
return `${this.firstName} ${this.lastName}`;
}
set fullName(full) {
const [firstName, lastName] = full.split(' ');
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
}
DB Document:
{
_id: ObjectId("<some long id>"),
firstName: "Will",
lastName: "Smith"
}
Non-Virtuals are supported too:
example:
function setFullName(val: string[]): string {
return val.join(' ');
}
function getFullname(val: string): string[] {
return val.split(' ');
}
class Name {
@prop({ set: setFullName, get: getFullname })
fullname: string[]; // this is just for type completion & getting the type for the schema
}
...
await NameModel.create({ fullname: ['Will', 'Smith'] });
const [first, last]: string[] = (await NameModel.findOne({}).exec()).fullname;
DB Document:
{
_id: ObjectId("<some long id>"),
fullname: "Will Smith"
}
Virtual-Populate is also supported by doing
class RefClass {
@prop({ required: true, ref: Virtual })
public refToName: Ref<Virtual>;
}
class Name {
@prop({ ref: RefClass, foreignField: 'refToName', localField: '_id', justOne: false })
public somevalue: Ref<RefClass>;
}
Options (look here for more details):
ref
: This is like a normal ref [Required]foreignField
: Which property(on the ref-Class) to match localField
against [Required]localField
: Which property(on the current-Class) to match foreignField
against [Required]justOne
: Return as One Document(true) or as Array(false) [Optional]count
: Return the number of Documents found instead of the actual Documents [Optional]The arrayProp
is a prop
decorator which makes it possible to create array schema properties.
The options
object accepts required
, enum
and default
, just like the prop
decorator. In addition to these the following properties exactly one should be given:
items
: This will tell Typegoose that this is an array which consists of primitives (if String
, Number
, or other primitive type is given) or this is an array which consists of subdocuments (if it's extending the Typegoose
class).
@arrayProp({ items: String })
languages?: string[];
Note that unfortunately the reflect-metadata API does not let us determine the type of the array, it only returns Array
when the type of the property is queried. This is why redundancy is required here.
itemsRef
: In mutual exclusion with items
, this tells Typegoose that instead of a subdocument array, this is an array with references in it. On the Mongoose side this means that an array of Object IDs will be stored under this property. Just like with ref
in the prop
decorator, the type of this property should be Ref<T>[]
.
class Car {}
// in another class
@arrayProp({ itemsRef: Car })
previousCars?: Ref<Car>[];
itemsRefPath
(IRP): Is the same as itemsRef
only that it looks at the specified path of the class which specifies which model to use
class Car {}
class Shop {}
// in another class
class Another {
@prop({ required: true, enum: ['Car', 'Shop'] })
which!: string;
@arrayProp({ itemsRefPath: 'which' })
items?: Ref<Car | Shop>[];
}
The mapProp
is a prop
decorator which makes it possible to create map schema properties.
The options object accepts enum
and default
, just like prop
decorator. In addition to these the following properties are accepted:
of
: This will tell Typegoose that the Map value consists of primitives (if String
, Number
, or other primitive type is given) or this is an array which consists of subdocuments (if it's extending the Typegoose
class).
class Car {
@mapProp({ of: Car })
public keys?: Map<string, Car>;
}
Method Decorators are deprecated see Migrate to 6.0.0
Mongoose allows the developer to add pre and post hooks / middlewares to the schema. With this it is possible to add document transformations and observations before or after validation, save and more.
Typegoose provides this functionality through TypeScript's class decorators.
The Model Options can be used like below
@modelOptions({ existingMongoose, schemaOptions, existingConnection })
class Name {}
The Options for @modelOptions
:
existingMongoose: mongoose
: An existing Mongoose instance can also be passed down. If given, Typegoose uses this Mongoose instance's model
methods.schemaOptions: mongoose.SchemaOptions
: Additional schema options can be passed down to the schema-to-be-created.existingConnection: mongoose.Connection
: An existing Mongoose connection can also be passed down. If given, Typegoose uses this Mongoose instance's model
methods.We can simply attach a @pre
decorator to the Typegoose class and define the hook function like you normally would in Mongoose.
(Method supports REGEXP)
@pre<Car>('save', function(next) {
if (this.model === 'Tesla') {
this.isFast = true;
}
next();
})
class Car {
@prop({ required: true })
model!: string;
@prop()
isFast?: boolean;
}
This will execute the pre-save hook each time a Car
document is saved. Inside the pre-hook Mongoose binds the actual document to this
.
Note that additional typing information is required either by passing the class itself as a type parameter <Car>
or explicity telling TypeScript that this
is a Car
(this: Car
). This will grant typing informations inside the hook function.
Same as pre
, the post
hook is also implemented as a class decorator. Usage is equivalent with the one Mongoose provides.
(Method supports REGEXP)
@post<Car>('save', (car) => {
if (car.topSpeedInKmH > 300) {
console.log(car.model, 'is fast!');
}
})
class Car {
@prop({ required: true })
model!: string;
@prop({ required: true })
topSpeedInKmH!: number;
}
Of course this
is not the document in a post hook (see Mongoose docs). Again typing information is required either by explicit parameter typing or by providing a template type.
Using the plugin
decorator enables the developer to attach various Mongoose plugins to the schema. Just like the regular schema.plugin()
call, the decorator accepts 1 or 2 parameters: the plugin itself, and an optional configuration object. Multiple plugin
decorator can be used for a single Typegoose class.
If the plugin enhances the schema with additional properties or instance / static methods this typing information should be added manually to the Typegoose class as well.
import * as findOrCreate from 'mongoose-findorcreate';
@plugin(findOrCreate)
class User {
// this isn't the complete method signature, just an example
static findOrCreate(condition: DocumentType<User>):
Promise<{ doc: DocumentType<User>, created: boolean }>;
}
const UserModel = getModelForClass(User);
const result = await UserModel.findOrCreate({ ... });
The @index
decorator can be used to define advanced index types and index options not available via the
index
option of the @prop
property decorator, such as compound indices, GeoJSON index types,
partial indices, expiring documents, etc. Any values supported by
MongoDB's createIndex()
are also valid for @index
. For more info refer to interface IndexOptions
@index({ article: 1, user: 1 }, { unique: true })
@index({ location: '2dsphere' })
@index({ article: 1 }, { partialFilterExpression: { stars: { $gte: 4.5 } } })
class Location {
@prop()
article?: number;
@prop()
user?: number;
@prop()
stars?: number;
@arrayProp({ items: Array })
location?: [[Number]]
}
Some additional types were added to make Typegoose more user friendly.
(for some additional types, that are not exported by default can be accessed via import * as types from 'typegoose/types'
)
This is basically the logical 'and' of the T
and the mongoose.Document
, so that both the Mongoose instance properties/functions and the user defined properties/instance methods are available on the instance.
This is the logical 'and' of mongoose.Model<DocumentType<T>>
and T
, so that the Mongoose model creates DocumentType<T>
typed instances and all user defined static methods are available on the model.
For reference properties:
Ref<T>
- T
if populated and ObjectID
if unpopulated.
-> there are TypeGuards for this to check named:
isDocument(T)
: returns true
if T
is populated, false otherwiseisDocumentArray(T)
: returns true
if T
is an Array AND is fully populatedmongoose
is a peer-dependency, and a dev dependency to install it for dev purposes+1
or something like that, use the Reactionsnpm run doc
generates all documentation for all files that can be used as modules (is used for github-pages)npm run doc:all
generates documentation even for internal modulests-node --transpile-only
, --type-check
must be added at least, szokodiakos#196FAQs
Define Mongoose models using TypeScript classes
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