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How do I limit the number of returned items?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-02 02:18 出处:网络
myModel.find({}, function(err, items) { console.log(items.length);// Big number }); How can I limitthe returned开发者_如何学Python items to only the latest 10 items that were inserted?In the latest
myModel.find({}, function(err, items) {
    console.log(items.length);    // Big number
});

How can I limit the returned开发者_如何学Python items to only the latest 10 items that were inserted?


In the latest mongoose (3.8.1 at the time of writing), you do two things differently: (1) you have to pass single argument to sort(), which must be an array of constraints or just one constraint, and (2) execFind() is gone, and replaced with exec() instead. Therefore, with the mongoose 3.8.1 you'd do this:

var q = models.Post.find({published: true}).sort({'date': -1}).limit(20);
q.exec(function(err, posts) {
     // `posts` will be of length 20
});

or you can chain it together simply like that:

models.Post
  .find({published: true})
  .sort({'date': -1})
  .limit(20)
  .exec(function(err, posts) {
       // `posts` will be of length 20
  });


Like this, using .limit():

var q = models.Post.find({published: true}).sort('date', -1).limit(20);
q.execFind(function(err, posts) {
  // `posts` will be of length 20
});


I am a bit lazy, so I like simple things:

let users = await Users.find({}, null, {limit: 50});


models.Post.find({published: true}, {sort: {'date': -1}, limit: 20}, function(err, posts) {
 // `posts` with sorted length of 20
});


Find parameters

The parameters find function takes are as follows:

  1. conditions «Object».
  2. [projection] «Object|String» optional fields to return, see Query.prototype.select()
  3. [options] «Object» optional see Query.prototype.setOptions()
  4. [callback] «Function»

How to limit

const Post = require('./models/Post');

Post.find(
  { published: true }, 
  null, 
  { sort: { 'date': 'asc' }, limit: 20 },
  function(error, posts) {
   if (error) return `${error} while finding from post collection`;

   return posts; // posts with sorted length of 20
  }
);

Extra Info

Mongoose allows you to query your collections in different ways like: Official Documentation

// named john and at least 18
MyModel.find({ name: 'john', age: { $gte: 18 }});

// executes, passing results to callback
MyModel.find({ name: 'john', age: { $gte: 18 }}, function (err, docs) {});

// executes, name LIKE john and only selecting the "name" and "friends" fields
MyModel.find({ name: /john/i }, 'name friends', function (err, docs) { })

// passing options
MyModel.find({ name: /john/i }, null, { skip: 10 })

// passing options and executes
MyModel.find({ name: /john/i }, null, { skip: 10 }, function (err, docs) {});

// executing a query explicitly
var query = MyModel.find({ name: /john/i }, null, { skip: 10 })
query.exec(function (err, docs) {});

// using the promise returned from executing a query
var query = MyModel.find({ name: /john/i }, null, { skip: 10 });
var promise = query.exec();
promise.addBack(function (err, docs) {});


For some reason I could not get this to work with the proposed answers, but I found another variation, using select, that worked for me:

models.Post.find().sort('-date').limit(10).select('published').exec(function(e, data){
        ...
});

Has the api perhaps changed? I am using version 3.8.19


...additionally make sure to use:

mongoose.Promise = Promise;

This sets the mongoose promise to the native ES6 promise. Without this addition I got:

DeprecationWarning: Mongoose: mpromise (mongoose's default promise library) is deprecated, plug in your own promise library instead: http://mongoosejs.com/docs/promises.html

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