How to populate a sub-document in mongoose after creating it?

Solution 1:

In order to populate referenced subdocuments, you need to explicitly define the document collection to which the ID references to (like created_by: { type: Schema.Types.ObjectId, ref: 'User' }).

Given this reference is defined and your schema is otherwise well defined as well, you can now just call populate as usual (e.g. populate('comments.created_by'))

Proof of concept code:

// Schema
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;

var UserSchema = new Schema({
  name: String
});

var CommentSchema = new Schema({
  text: String,
  created_by: { type: Schema.Types.ObjectId, ref: 'User' }
});

var ItemSchema = new Schema({
   comments: [CommentSchema]
});

// Connect to DB and instantiate models    
var db = mongoose.connect('enter your database here');
var User = db.model('User', UserSchema);
var Comment = db.model('Comment', CommentSchema);
var Item = db.model('Item', ItemSchema);

// Find and populate
Item.find({}).populate('comments.created_by').exec(function(err, items) {
    console.log(items[0].comments[0].created_by.name);
});

Finally note that populate works only for queries so you need to first pass your item into a query and then call it:

item.save(function(err, item) {
    Item.findOne(item).populate('comments.created_by').exec(function (err, item) {
        res.json({
            status: 'success',
            message: "You have commented on this item",
            comment: item.comments.id(comment._id)
        });
    });
});

Solution 2:

This might have changed since the original answer was written, but it looks like you can now use the Models populate function to do this without having to execute an extra findOne. See: http://mongoosejs.com/docs/api.html#model_Model.populate. You'd want to use this inside the save handler just like the findOne is.

Solution 3:

@user1417684 and @chris-foster are right!

excerpt from working code (without error handling):

var SubItemModel = mongoose.model('subitems', SubItemSchema);
var ItemModel    = mongoose.model('items', ItemSchema);

var new_sub_item_model = new SubItemModel(new_sub_item_plain);
new_sub_item_model.save(function (error, new_sub_item) {

  var new_item = new ItemModel(new_item);
  new_item.subitem = new_sub_item._id;
  new_item.save(function (error, new_item) {
    // so this is a valid way to populate via the Model
    // as documented in comments above (here @stack overflow):
    ItemModel.populate(new_item, { path: 'subitem', model: 'subitems' }, function(error, new_item) {
      callback(new_item.toObject());
    });
    // or populate directly on the result object
    new_item.populate('subitem', function(error, new_item) {
      callback(new_item.toObject());
    });
  });

});

Solution 4:

I faced the same problem,but after hours of efforts i find the solution.It can be without using any external plugin:)

applicantListToExport: function (query, callback) {
  this
   .find(query).select({'advtId': 0})
   .populate({
      path: 'influId',
      model: 'influencer',
      select: { '_id': 1,'user':1},
      populate: {
        path: 'userid',
        model: 'User'
      }
   })
 .populate('campaignId',{'campaignTitle':1})
 .exec(callback);
}