I am working with the Loopback Framework, doing a web project. But I think that the question that I am exposing here has less to do with this, but with general Javascript / Node.JS knowledge.
At one part of the code, I am doing:
roleMapping.find({
where: {
principalType: 'USER',
principalId: context.principals[0].id
},
include: 'role'
}, function(err, roles){
console.log(roles[0]);
for (var i in roles)
{
if (roles[i].role.name === 'teamLeader' &&
roles[i].groupId === context.modelId)
{
cb(null,true);
}else {
cb(null,false);
}
}
});
Ok with this, but it fails when trying to compare roles[i].role.name
.
So, I went logging what the roles[i]
object contained.
{ groupId: 1,
id: 3,
principalType: 'USER',
principalId: 1,
roleId: 2,
role:
{ id: 2,
name: 'teamLeader',
description: 'The leader(s) of a team',
created: null,
modified: null } }
Ok, nothing wrong, but it still fails, so I tried to print just the role
property. And to my surprise:
{ [Function]
update: [Function],
destroy: [Function],
create: [Function],
build: [Function],
_targetClass: 'Role' }
So, the role
property seems to be some sort of function? But how it was been correctly printed before?
Eventually, lost in my frustration I tried var role = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(roles[i]));
And then I could access every property of the object normally, but this is not clean nor normal.
This blew my mind for the first time in years of JS programming (sort of amateurish though), and I would be pleased if someone could clarify this to me. Thanks
EDIT: It seems that it is specific to this Framework, so I'm changing title to help community.
I just found issue 1425 which links to the following docs:
So it seems you have to use