I'm having problems creating a variable and using it in a MEAN package. I'm basing it off of the "articles" package that comes as an example. Everything I see is the same in the client-side controller, but I'm not sure why I'm catching the error when I try to start my app (with grunt) on the "books" package but not the "articles" package.
I have not implemented all the controllers that articles has yet, that may be an issue?
When I start the app with grunt, I get this error on : 'book' is defined but never used MEAN stack controller
I believe the error is in the controller, but if you need to see other files please let me know.
books.js
//client-side controller
'use strict';
angular.module('mean.books').controller('BooksController', ['$scope', 'Global', 'Books',
function($scope, Global, Books) {
$scope.global = Global;
$scope.package = {
name: 'books'
};
$scope.hasAuthorization = function(book) {
if (!book || !book.user) return false;
return $scope.global.isAdmin || book.user._id === $scope.global.user._id;
};
$scope.create = function(isValid) {
if (isValid) {
var book = new Books({
title: this.title,
author: this.author,
description: this.description,
seller: this.seller
});
/* Not sure if we need this location thing
book.$save(function(response) {
$location.path('books/' + response._id);
});
*/
this.title = '';
this.content = '';
this.description = '';
this.seller = ''; // or this.user implement
} else {
$scope.submitted = true;
}
};
}
]);
articles.js //this is the example that I'm basing it from
'use strict';
angular.module('mean.articles').controller('ArticlesController', ['$scope', '$stateParams', '$location', 'Global', 'Articles',
function($scope, $stateParams, $location, Global, Articles) {
$scope.global = Global;
$scope.hasAuthorization = function(article) {
if (!article || !article.user) return false;
return $scope.global.isAdmin || article.user._id === $scope.global.user._id;
};
$scope.create = function(isValid) {
if (isValid) {
var article = new Articles({
title: this.title,
content: this.content
});
article.$save(function(response) {
$location.path('articles/' + response._id);
});
this.title = '';
this.content = '';
} else {
$scope.submitted = true;
}
};
$scope.remove = function(article) {
if (article) {
article.$remove(function(response) {
for (var i in $scope.articles) {
if ($scope.articles[i] === article) {
$scope.articles.splice(i, 1);
}
}
$location.path('articles');
});
} else {
$scope.article.$remove(function(response) {
$location.path('articles');
});
}
};
$scope.update = function(isValid) {
if (isValid) {
var article = $scope.article;
if (!article.updated) {
article.updated = [];
}
article.updated.push(new Date().getTime());
article.$update(function() {
$location.path('articles/' + article._id);
});
} else {
$scope.submitted = true;
}
};
$scope.find = function() {
Articles.query(function(articles) {
$scope.articles = articles;
});
};
$scope.findOne = function() {
Articles.get({
articleId: $stateParams.articleId
}, function(article) {
$scope.article = article;
});
};
}
]);
In $scope.create
function you defined book
var book = new Books({
and never use it. That's reason you get warning. If you want to skip jshint warnings in development use grunt -f
or allow unused variables in your grunt configuration (or .jshintrc if you use it)