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@yoavniran
yoavniran / ultimate-ut-cheat-sheet.md
Last active July 12, 2024 11:15
The Ultimate Unit Testing Cheat-sheet For Mocha, Chai, Sinon, and Jest
@brennanMKE
brennanMKE / hero.ts
Last active July 15, 2024 15:25
Example of Mongoose with TypeScript and MongoDb
import * as mongoose from 'mongoose';
export let Schema = mongoose.Schema;
export let ObjectId = mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId;
export let Mixed = mongoose.Schema.Types.Mixed;
export interface IHeroModel extends mongoose.Document {
name: string;
power: string;
@bvaughn
bvaughn / react-lifecycle-cheatsheet.md
Last active March 2, 2023 13:29
React lifecycle cheatsheet

React lifecycle cheatsheet

Method Side effects1 State updates2 Example uses
Mounting
componentWillMount Constructor equivalent for createClass
render Create and return element(s)
componentDidMount DOM manipulations, network requests, etc.
Updating
componentWillReceiveProps Update state based on changed props
@zcaceres
zcaceres / Include-in-Sequelize.md
Last active July 13, 2024 13:46
using Include in sequelize

'Include' in Sequelize: The One Confusing Query That You Should Memorize

When querying your database in Sequelize, you'll often want data associated with a particular model which isn't in the model's table directly. This data is usually typically associated through join tables (e.g. a 'hasMany' or 'belongsToMany' association), or a foreign key (e.g. a 'hasOne' or 'belongsTo' association).

When you query, you'll receive just the rows you've looked for. With eager loading, you'll also get any associated data. For some reason, I can never remember the proper way to do eager loading when writing my Sequelize queries. I've seen others struggle with the same thing.

Eager loading is confusing because the 'include' that is uses has unfamiliar fields is set in an array rather than just an object.

So let's go through the one query that's worth memorizing to handle your eager loading.

The Basic Query