3

This is my server.js where I can run the code to initialize my server through localhost:7000. And the route that I am running is product.js:

Product Route:

const express = require('express');
const router = express.Router();

const Pro = require('../model/Product');

router.get('/', (req, res) => {
    Pro.find()
    .sort({ entrydate: -1 })
    .then(product => res.json(product));
});
router.post('/product', ( req, res ) => {
    res.send('Posting a response')
});
module.exports = router;

Which gets the error:

TypeError: Product.route is not a function

Product Model:

const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const Schema = mongoose.Schema;

const ProductSchema = new Schema({
  // Objects and Properties are here
});

const Product = mongoose.model('products', ProductSchema);
module.exports = { Product };

How do I get out of this mess?

3
  • 1
    How are you exporting your Pro model can we see the code for that please? (just edit your answer to include it)
    – u-ways
    Sep 6, 2018 at 13:35
  • Product.route ?? Can you clarify on this. Also are you using mongoose? If yes please share the schema and try to use mongoose.model("name of the model") instead of requiring whole file.
    – Ankit
    Sep 6, 2018 at 13:36
  • @1010101 This is my model const mongoose = require('mongoose'); const Schema = mongoose.Schema; const ProductSchema = new Schema({ //Objects and Properties are here}) const Product = mongoose.model('products', ProductSchema); module.exports = { Product };
    – user10272439
    Sep 7, 2018 at 5:41

3 Answers 3

4

You're exporting Product within an object:

module.exports = { Product };

Therefore, what you're doing when you try to find a product is:

{ Product }.find();

Which is probably what you don't want. Instead:

module.exports = Product;

or instead of creating a Product variable:

module.exports = mongoose.model('products', ProductSchema);

Both should export products model only and fix your problem.

0
1

Learn about destructuring in javascript. You can handle this by

const {Product} = require('../model/Product'); //recommended

or

const any_variable_name = require('../model/Product').Product;

module.exports = variable_name will also help but if you have multiple variables to export then you have to write this whole line multiple times. whereas module.exports = {v1,v2,v3...vn} will be more readable

0

use module.exports = Product in your Product Route

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