Sorting in Mongoose has evolved over the releases such that some of these answers are no longer valid. As of the 4.1.x release of Mongoose, a descending sort on the date
field can be done in any of the following ways:
Room.find({}).sort('-date').exec((err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}).sort({date: -1}).exec((err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}).sort({date: 'desc'}).exec((err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}).sort({date: 'descending'}).exec((err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}).sort([['date', -1]]).exec((err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}, null, {sort: '-date'}, (err, docs) => { ... });
Room.find({}, null, {sort: {date: -1}}, (err, docs) => { ... });
For an ascending sort, omit the -
prefix on the string version or use values of 1
, asc
, or ascending
.
The correct answer is:
Blah.find({}).sort({date: -1}).execFind(function(err,docs){
});
Been dealing with this issue today using Mongoose 3.5(.2) and none of the answers quite helped me solve this issue. The following code snippet does the trick
Post.find().sort('-posted').find(function (err, posts) {
// user posts array
});
You can send any standard parameters you need to find()
(e.g. where clauses and return fields) but no callback. Without a callback it returns a Query object which you chain sort()
on. You need to call find()
again (with or without more parameters -- shouldn't need any for efficiency reasons) which will allow you to get the result set in your callback.
Post.find().sort({date:-1}, function(err, posts){
});
Should work as well
EDIT:
You can also try using this if you get the error sort() only takes 1 Argument
:
Post.find({}, {
'_id': 0, // select keys to return here
}, {sort: '-date'}, function(err, posts) {
// use it here
});
I do this:
Data.find( { $query: { user: req.user }, $orderby: { dateAdded: -1 } } function ( results ) {
...
})
This will show the most recent things first.
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