I am implementing a restful api to do stuff just with a local file:
data.js:
let store = { posts: [ { id: 1, name: 'Top 10 ES6 Features every Web Developer must know', url: 'https://webapplog.com/es6', text: "This essay will give you a quick introduction to ES6. If you don’t know what is ES6, it’s a new JavaScript implementation.", comments: [ { text: 'Cruel…..var { house, mouse} = No type optimization at all' }, { text: 'I think you’re undervaluing the benefit of ‘let’ and ‘const’.' }, { text: '(p1,p2)=>{ … } ,i understand this ,thank you !' } ] }, { id: 2, name: 'anotherPost', url: 'https://webapplog.com/es6', text: "This essay will give you a quick introduction to ES6. If you don’t know what is ES6, it’s a new JavaScript implementation.", comments: [ { text: 'Cruel…..var { house, mouse} = No type optimization at all' }, { text: 'I think you’re undervaluing the benefit of ‘let’ and ‘const’.' }, { text: '(p1,p2)=>{ … } ,i understand this ,thank you !' } ] } ] } module.exports = store;
For example here´s how I do a Post request to create another post
:
router.post('/', (req, res) => { data.posts.push({ id: req.body.id, name: req.body.name, url: req.body.url, text: req.body.text, comments: [ req.body.comments ] }) res.send(data.posts) })
Or here´s how I delete a post (i actually add it the id property in order to do this, although minutes later i found out it wasn´t neccesary, but because of it it wasn´t the reason it came up the creation of this question)
router.delete('/:postId', (req, res) => { const post_id = req.body.id; const index = post_id -1; data.posts.splice(index, 1); res.send(data.posts) })
So when I try to do the put route i came up with this, although later i also found out i could just use data.posts[index].name = etc...
but I decided to open this question because i have really curiosity in how something can this could work (obviously something similar since the following code does not work):
data.posts.filter(post => { post.id === req.params.postId; }).then(post => { post.id = req.body.id, post.name = req.body.name, post.url = req.body.url, post.text = req.body.text, post.comments = [ req.body.comments ] })
What am trying to do there is once the correct post has been filtered, then modify the properties of that post. I´ve been doing javascript for months but i have always been blindly following tutorials and never stop to actually learn how callbacks work or how that code is not possible. But because i see similar code to work (callbacks in express), i was wondering if somebody could give some direction.
As i said i already have the simple solution sorted it out but i am very curious in how i could so something like that with the filter function (or just educate me in how this things works)
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Answer
Since the Array#filter
method is synchronous and returns the filtered array, you can chain the Array#map
function to it in order to transform the elements of the filtered array. There’s no need for a “callback” or promise in the sense that the code is all synchronous … for iterative methods like map and filter, the function argument is typically called an “iteratee”.
So for your last code block, you can simply do something like this:
const filteredAndModifiedPosts = data.posts.filter(post => { return post.id === req.params.postId; }).map(post => { post.id = req.body.id, post.name = req.body.name, post.url = req.body.url, post.text = req.body.text, post.comments = [ req.body.comments ] return post })