Mongoose plugin that allows easy access to enum values. You can create virtuals, attach to your document, or modify your enum property in-place. Now with a TypeScript definition.
npm install [--save] mongoose-enumvalues
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const enumValues = require('mongoose-enumvalues');
const { Schema } = mongoose;
const UserSchema = new Schema({
name: String,
age: Number,
role: {
type: String,
enum: ['admin', 'moderator', 'guest'],
default: 'guest'
},
gender: {
type: String,
uppercase: true,
enum: ['MALE', 'FEMALE'],
default: 'FEMALE'
},
nesting: {
enums: {
type: String,
enum: ['something', 'wicked', 'this', 'way', 'comes']
}
}
});
// specifics for each method below
const enumOptions = {};
UserSchema.plugin(enumValues, enumOptions);
module.exports = mongoose.model('User', UserSchema);
Automatically create virtual properties for enum value access.
const enumOptions = {
virtual: {
only: ['gender', 'role'],
properties: {
gender: 'genders',
role: 'roleValues'
}
}
};
//...
user.genders
=> ['MALE', 'FEMALE']
user.roleValues
=> ['admin', 'moderator', 'guest']
Simply attach enum values to your documents, restricting which paths are included,
and which methods hooked: ['find', 'findOne']
const enumOptions = {
find: true,
findOne: true,
attach: {
//only: ['gender', 'role'], if omitted, determines properties via keys
properties: {
gender: {
as: 'genderOptions',
only: ['findOne'] // restricts attaching to 'findOne' method
},
role: { // will be attached on 'find' and 'findOne'
as: 'roles'
}
}
}
};
//...
user.genderOptions
=> ['MALE', 'FEMALE']
user.roles
=> ['admin', 'moderator', 'guest']
This option directly modifies the enum property to be an object, including the original value and the array of enum options.
In order for this to work correctly, lean()
must be called.
const enumOptions = {
find: true,
findOne: true
modify: true
};
user.gender
=> {
values: ['MALE', 'FEMALE'],
value: 'MALE'
}
user.role
=> {
values: ['admin', 'moderator', 'guest'],
value: 'guest'
}
user.nesting
=> {
enums: {
values: ['something', 'wicked', 'this', 'way', 'comes'],
value: null
}
}
// You may set modified values as such
user.nesting.enums = 'wicked';
// or
user.nesting.enums.value = 'wicked';
// Alternatively you may restrict the paths and the methods
const enumOptions = {
modify: {
only: ['role'],
on: ['findOne']
}
}
Model.update
bypasses any validations and middleware. Utilizing this method with modify
will produce undesired results.
Due to the nature of Mongoose objects, modify
must be used in conjunction with lean()
.
Example: User.findOne({ username }).lean().then()...