How to update a array value in Mongoose

You can’t use both $set and $push in the same update expression as nested operators.

The correct syntax for using the update operators follows:

{
   <operator1>: { <field1>: <value1>, ... },
   <operator2>: { <field2>: <value2>, ... },
   ...
}

where <operator1>, <operator2> can be from any of the update operators list specified here.

For adding a new element to the array, a single $push operator will suffice e.g. you can use the findByIdAndUpdate update method to return the modified document as

Employeehierarchy.findByIdAndUpdate(employeeparent._id,
    { "$push": { "childrens": employee._id } },
    { "new": true, "upsert": true },
    function (err, managerparent) {
        if (err) throw err;
        console.log(managerparent);
    }
);

Using your original update() method, the syntax is

Employeehierarchy.update(
   { "_id": employeeparent._id},
   { "$push": { "childrens": employee._id } },
   function (err, raw) {
       if (err) return handleError(err);
       console.log('The raw response from Mongo was ', raw);
   }
);

in which the callback function receives the arguments (err, raw) where

  • err is the error if any occurred
  • raw is the full response from Mongo

Since you want to check the modified document, I’d suggest you use the findByIdAndUpdate function since the update() method won’t give you the modified document, just the full write result from mongo.


If you want to update a field in the document and add an element to an array at the same time then you can do

Employeehierarchy.findByIdAndUpdate(employeeparent._id,
    { 
        "$set": { "name": "foo" },
        "$push": { "childrens": employee._id } 
    } 
    { "new": true, "upsert": true },
    function (err, managerparent) {
        if (err) throw err;
        console.log(managerparent);
    }
);

The above will update the name field to “foo” and add the employee id to the childrens array.

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