You seem to be talking about "input" data being different for the queries you want to issue and how to contruct the query to ignore fields as criteria for which you have no input.
This is all really about how the input is being collected as to how you handle it, but it all boils down to that you "conditionally build" the query ( which is just a data structure anyway ) rather than statically define a query and somehow ignore null
or empty data.
So if you have seperate variables, then you test each value and build the query:
var firstName = "abc",
lastName = "xy,
email = null,
query = {};
if (firstName) {
query.firstName = new RegExp("^"+firstName,"i")
}
if (lastName) {
query.lastName = new RegExp("^"+lastName,"i")
}
if (email) {
query.email = new RegExp("^"+email,"i")
}
db.students.find(query)
This would build a query object that would end up like this based on the inputs:
{ "firstName": /^abc/i, "lastName": /^xy/i }
So since there is no value in email
then the condition is not included. The end result is the condition not provided is not even queried for and then you get the relevant matches.
The same approach is basically simplified if you have some structured input to begin with:
var params = {
firstName = "abc",
lastName = "xy"
};
var query = {};
Object.keys(params).forEach(function(key) {
if (params[key])
query[key] = new RegExp("^"+key,"i");
});
db.students.find(query);
And it's the same thing, but since you have all parameter keys in one place then you can iterate them to build the query rather than test individually.
This is generally the case where you have input from something like a web request with parameters that come into req.params
or even req.body
depending on your method of input. So if you structure your code to accept input into a similar object ( or already have it ) then you use it to build your query.
Also note that all MongoDB query arguments are implicitly an "AND" condition by definition, so there is rarely any need to use $and
unless you explicitly have multiple conditions to meet for the same document property. Even then there are generally better syntax alternates.
db.students.find( { first_name: /^Abc$/i, last_name: 'Firtis', email_id:'gd@he'} )
– Curcuma_ Sep 28 '15 at 5:10