I have a bunch of records and I need to get latest (most recent) and the oldest (least recent).
When googling I found this topic where I saw a couple of queries:
// option 1
Tweet.findOne({}, [], { $orderby : { 'created_at' : -1 } }, function(err, post) {
console.log( post );
});
// option 2
Tweet.find({}, [], {sort:[['arrival',-1]]}, function(err, post) {
console.log( post );
});
Unfortunatly they both error:
TypeError: Invalid select() argument. Must be a string or object.
The link also has this one:
Tweet.find().sort('_id','descending').limit(15).find(function(err, post) {
console.log( post );
});
and that one errors:
TypeError: Invalid sort() argument. Must be a string or object.
So how can I get those records?
Even more ideally I just want the difference in time (seconds?) between the oldest and the newest record, but I have no clue on how to start making a query like that.
This is the schema:
var Tweet = new Schema({
body: String
, fid: { type: String, index: { unique: true } }
, username: { type: String, index: true }
, userid: Number
, created_at: Date
, source: String
});
I'm pretty sure I have the most recent version of mongoDB and mongoose.
This is how I calc the timespan based on the answer provided by JohnnyHK:
var calcDays = function( cb ) {
var getOldest = function( cb ) {
Tweet.findOne({}, {}, { sort: { 'created_at' : 1 } }, function(err, post) {
cb( null, post.created_at.getTime() );
});
}
, getNewest = function( cb ) {
Tweet.findOne({}, {}, { sort: { 'created_at' : -1 } }, function(err, post) {
cb( null, post.created_at.getTime() );
});
}
async.parallel({
oldest: getOldest
, newest: getNewest
}
, function( err, results ) {
var days = ( results.newest - results.oldest ) / 1000 / 60 / 60 / 24;
// days = Math.round( days );
cb( null, days );
}
);
}
Mongoose 3.x is complaining about the []
parameter in your findOne
calls as the array format is no longer supported for the parameter that selects the fields to include.
Try this instead to find the newest:
Tweet.findOne({}, {}, { sort: { 'created_at' : -1 } }, function(err, post) {
console.log( post );
});
Change the -1
to a 1
to find the oldest.
But because you're not using any field selection, it's somewhat cleaner to chain a couple calls together:
Tweet.findOne().sort({created_at: -1}).exec(function(err, post) { ... });
Or even pass a string to sort
:
Tweet.findOne().sort('-created_at').exec(function(err, post) { ... });