.replaceCollection()
Replace all members of the specified collection (e.g. the comments
of BlogPost #4).
await Something.replaceCollection(parentId, association)
.members(childIds);
Argument | Type | Details | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | parentId | The primary key value(s) (i.e. ids) for the parent record(s). Must be a number or string (e.g. '507f191e810c19729de860ea' or 49 ). Alternatively, an array of numbers or strings may be specified (e.g. ['507f191e810c19729de860ea', '14832ace0c179de897'] or [49, 32, 37] ). In this case, the child records will be replaced in each parent record. |
|
2 | association | The name of the plural ("collection") association (e.g. "pets") | |
3 | childIds | The primary key values (i.e. ids) for the child records that will be the new members of the association. Note that this does not create these records or destroy the old ones, it just attaches/detaches records to/from the specified parent(s). |
Name | Type | When? |
---|---|---|
UsageError | Thrown if something invalid was passed in. | |
AdapterError | Thrown if something went wrong in the database adapter. | |
Error | Thrown if anything else unexpected happens. |
See Concepts > Models and ORM > Errors for examples of negotiating errors in Sails and Waterline.
For user 3, replace all pets in the "pets" collection with pets 99 and 98:
await User.replaceCollection(3, 'pets')
.members([99,98]);
- This method can be used with
await
, promise chaining, or traditional Node callbacks.- If the association is "2-way" (meaning it has
via
) then the child records will be modified accordingly. If the attribute on the other side is singular, the each newly-linked-or-unlinked child record's foreign key will be changed. If it's plural, then each child record's collection will be modified accordingly.- In addition, if the
via
points at a singular ("model") attribute on the other side, then.addToCollection()
will "steal" these child records if necessary. For example, imagine you have an Employee model with this plural ("collection") attribute:involvedInPurchases: { collection: 'Purchase', via: 'cashier' }
. If you executedEmployee.addToCollection(7, 'involvedInPurchases', [47])
to assign this purchase to employee #7 (Dolly), but purchase #47 was already associated with a different employee (e.g. #12, Motoki), then this would "steal" the purchase from Motoki and give it to Dolly. In other words, if you executedEmployee.find([7, 12]).populate('involvedInPurchases')
, Dolly'sinvolvedInPurchases
array would contain purchase #47 and Motoki's would not.