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You're reading from  Mongoose for Application Development

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2013
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782168195
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Simon Holmes
Simon Holmes
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Simon Holmes

Simon Holmes started his journey as a web developer in the late 1990s. He built his first website for a project at university and soon saw what the industry had to offer when he promptly sold it! Following university, Simon worked his way through the ranks of design agency life, learning the skills of becoming a full-stack web developer. From server management and database design to building dynamic UIs from Photoshop files, it all fell under Simon's remit. Having witnessed first-hand the terrible JavaScript code so prevalent in the early 2000s, Simon is very much enjoying its resurgence as a powerful, structured language. Simon now works in SaaS, which is very heavy on the JavaScript.
Read more about Simon Holmes

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Where to write the schemas


As your schemas sit on top of Mongoose, the only absolute is that they need to be defined after Mongoose is required. You don't need an active or open connection to define your schemas.

That being said it is advisable to make your connection early on, so that it is available as soon as possible, bearing in mind that remote database or replica sets may take longer to connect than your localhost development server.

While no action can be taken on the database through the schemas and models until the connection is open, Mongoose can buffer requests made from when the connection is defined. Mongoose models also rely on the connection being defined, so there's another reason to get the connection set up early in the code and then define the schemas and models.

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Mongoose for Application Development
Published in: Aug 2013Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781782168195

Author (1)

author image
Simon Holmes

Simon Holmes started his journey as a web developer in the late 1990s. He built his first website for a project at university and soon saw what the industry had to offer when he promptly sold it! Following university, Simon worked his way through the ranks of design agency life, learning the skills of becoming a full-stack web developer. From server management and database design to building dynamic UIs from Photoshop files, it all fell under Simon's remit. Having witnessed first-hand the terrible JavaScript code so prevalent in the early 2000s, Simon is very much enjoying its resurgence as a powerful, structured language. Simon now works in SaaS, which is very heavy on the JavaScript.
Read more about Simon Holmes