Faizuddin Mohammed

Jan 5, 2019 17:11
Alright. :)
Jan 5, 2019 16:55
It should basically be a map of the category and the number of articles in the category.
Jan 5, 2019 16:53
And see if it is as expected?
Jan 5, 2019 16:53
Can you log this countByCategory?
Jan 5, 2019 16:52
Oh, interesting.
Jan 5, 2019 16:34
Look at the .forEach for the i
Jan 5, 2019 16:33
const articlesPerPage = 6;
const countByCategory = _.countBy(
  result.data.allMarkdownRemark.edges,
  edge => edge.node.frontmatter.categories
);

_(result.data.allMarkdownRemark.edges)
  .flatMap(edge => _.get(edge, "node.frontmatter.categories", []))
  .forEach((category, i) => {
    const numPages = Math.ceil(countByCategory[category] / articlesPerPage);
    createPage({
      path:
        i === 0
          ? `/${_.kebabCase(category)}`
          : `/${_.kebabCase(category)}/${i + 1}`,
      component: categoryTemplate,
Jan 5, 2019 16:32
Oh, sorry.
Jan 5, 2019 16:28
Can you let me know if this works?
Jan 5, 2019 16:24
I made use of Lodash's chain methods, I hope that's okay with you.
Jan 5, 2019 16:24
See if this makes sense?
Jan 5, 2019 16:24
const articlesPerPage = 6;
const countByCategory = _.countBy(
  result.data.allMarkdownRemark.edges,
  edge => edge.node.frontmatter.categories
);

_(result.data.allMarkdownRemark.edges)
  .flatMap(edge => _.get(edge, "node.frontmatter.categories"))
  .forEach(category => {
    const numPages = Math.ceil(countByCategory[category] / articlesPerPage);
    createPage({
      path:
        i === 0
          ? `/${_.kebabCase(category)}`
          : `/${_.kebabCase(category)}/${i + 1}`,
      component: categoryTemplate,
Jan 5, 2019 16:21
Alright, okay. So, what is the numPages in createPage?
Jan 5, 2019 16:17
And each article has multiple categories?
Jan 5, 2019 16:11
So, each edge is an article?
Jan 5, 2019 16:09
Okay, let me get back to you after I review it.
Jan 5, 2019 15:44
Thank you!
Jan 5, 2019 15:44
So I can understand what's happening.
Jan 5, 2019 15:44
Can you share a screenshot of the current code?
Jan 5, 2019 15:43
Hello!
Jan 5, 2019 15:42
Okay, let's start a chat please.
Jan 5, 2019 15:42
I updated the answer to do that. Please take a look.
Jan 5, 2019 15:42
The article variable - it's not defined here. Where do you get it from? I've not used Gatsby before and therefore do not exactly know how to get the article.
 
Feb 22, 2018 16:47
Welcome
Feb 22, 2018 16:45
Oh. Cool. Then you just need to send the response as a JSON and handle rendering on the React side.
Feb 22, 2018 16:43
Are you using any framework - like Express?
Feb 22, 2018 16:43
Yeah.
Feb 22, 2018 16:43
I also was superbly concerned about this in the beginning. Thought this was just wrong. But now it just feels natural.
Feb 22, 2018 16:42
You generate it inside the then callback.
Feb 22, 2018 16:42
user_info.then(user => {
// do your formatting and everything here
});
Feb 22, 2018 16:41
So you would do something like:
Feb 22, 2018 16:37
async await is just syntax sugar over promises. So, possible with both. But, go ahead with Promises so can use async await later.
Feb 22, 2018 16:37
You might also want to look into await async but I would strongly suggest to get thorough with promises before you go there.
Feb 22, 2018 16:37
Not possible with Promises. JS is async, so, you'll need to know when the db.getUser operation completed. And only then can you use the results. So, .then acts like the place where you can be sure that the user variable is available.
Feb 22, 2018 16:37
Yeah. You can totally do that. But like this: user_info.then(user => { var username = user.username; console.log(username); });
 
Feb 20, 2018 12:25
It's generally a good practice to have a seperate DAL file. DAL standing for Data Access Layer.
Feb 20, 2018 12:25
Okay why don't we make a seperate file just for the findData function?
Feb 20, 2018 10:00
Did it work?
Feb 20, 2018 09:59
Whassup?
Feb 20, 2018 09:59
Yup
Feb 20, 2018 09:47
Okay now you do?
Feb 20, 2018 09:45
You understood the concept right?
Feb 20, 2018 09:45
Yeah.. then, const router = require('./api.js');
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
const findData = routes.findData;
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
You just have to do:
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
Right?
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
const routes = require('./routes.js');
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
In server.js?
Feb 20, 2018 09:44
Okay, You are requiring the routes right?'
Feb 20, 2018 09:43
Did you properly export it? You have to make sure the exports.findData is a function in the routes.js