Many-to-many relations
- What are many-to-many relations
- Saving many-to-many relations
- Deleting many-to-many relations
- Loading many-to-many relations
- Bi-directional relations
- Many-to-many relations with custom properties
What are many-to-many relations
Many-to-many is a relation where A contains multiple instances of B, and B contains multiple instances of A.
Let's take for example Question
and Category
entities.
A question can have multiple categories, and each category can have multiple questions.
import { Entity, PrimaryGeneratedColumn, Column } from "typeorm"
@Entity()
export class Category {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
id: number
@Column()
name: string
}
import {
Entity,
PrimaryGeneratedColumn,
Column,
ManyToMany,
JoinTable,
} from "typeorm"
import { Category } from "./Category"
@Entity()
export class Question {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
id: number
@Column()
title: string
@Column()
text: string
@ManyToMany(() => Category)
@JoinTable()
categories: Category[]
}
@JoinTable()
is required for @ManyToMany
relations.
You must put @JoinTable
on one (owning) side of relation.
This example will produce following tables:
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| category |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| id | int(11) | PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT |
| name | varchar(255) | |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| question |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| id | int(11) | PRIMARY KEY AUTO_INCREMENT |
| title | varchar(255) | |
| text | varchar(255) | |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| question_categories_category |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
| questionId | int(11) | PRIMARY KEY FOREIGN KEY |
| categoryId | int(11) | PRIMARY KEY FOREIGN KEY |
+-------------+--------------+----------------------------+
Saving many-to-many relations
With cascades enabled, you can save this relation with only one save
call.
const category1 = new Category()
category1.name = "animals"
await dataSource.manager.save(category1)
const category2 = new Category()
category2.name = "zoo"
await dataSource.manager.save(category2)
const question = new Question()
question.title = "dogs"
question.text = "who let the dogs out?"
question.categories = [category1, category2]
await dataSource.manager.save(question)
Deleting many-to-many relations
With cascades enabled, you can delete this relation with only one save
call.
To delete a many-to-many relationship between two records, remove it from the corresponding field and save the record.
const question = await dataSource.getRepository(Question).findOne({
relations: {
categories: true,
},
where: { id: 1 }
})
question.categories = question.categories.filter((category) => {
return category.id !== categoryToRemove.id
})
await dataSource.manager.save(question)
This will only remove the record in the join table. The question
and categoryToRemove
records will still exist.
Soft Deleting a relationship with cascade
This example shows how the cascading soft delete behaves:
const category1 = new Category()
category1.name = "animals"
const category2 = new Category()
category2.name = "zoo"
const question = new Question()
question.categories = [category1, category2]
const newQuestion = await dataSource.manager.save(question)
await dataSource.manager.softRemove(newQuestion)
In this example we did not call save or softRemove for category1 and category2, but they will be automatically saved and soft-deleted when the cascade of relation options is set to true like this:
import {
Entity,
PrimaryGeneratedColumn,
Column,
ManyToMany,
JoinTable,
} from "typeorm"
import { Category } from "./Category"
@Entity()
export class Question {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
id: number
@ManyToMany(() => Category, (category) => category.questions, {
cascade: true,
})
@JoinTable()
categories: Category[]
}
Loading many-to-many relations
To load questions with categories inside you must specify the relation in FindOptions
:
const questionRepository = dataSource.getRepository(Question)
const questions = await questionRepository.find({
relations: {
categories: true,
},
})
Or using QueryBuilder
you can join them:
const questions = await dataSource
.getRepository(Question)
.createQueryBuilder("question")
.leftJoinAndSelect("question.categories", "category")
.getMany()
With eager loading enabled on a relation, you don't have to specify relations in the find command as it will ALWAYS be loaded automatically. If you use QueryBuilder eager relations are disabled, you have to use leftJoinAndSelect
to load the relation.
Bi-directional relations
Relations can be uni-directional and bi-directional. Uni-directional relations are relations with a relation decorator only on one side. Bi-directional relations are relations with decorators on both sides of a relation.
We just created a uni-directional relation. Let's make it bi-directional:
import { Entity, PrimaryGeneratedColumn, Column, ManyToMany } from "typeorm"
import { Question } from "./Question"
@Entity()
export class Category {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
id: number
@Column()
name: string
@ManyToMany(() => Question, (question) => question.categories)
questions: Question[]
}
import {
Entity,
PrimaryGeneratedColumn,
Column,
ManyToMany,
JoinTable,
} from "typeorm"
import { Category } from "./Category"
@Entity()
export class Question {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
id: number
@Column()
title: string
@Column()
text: string
@ManyToMany(() => Category, (category) => category.questions)
@JoinTable()
categories: Category[]
}
We just made our relation bi-directional. Note that the inverse relation does not have a @JoinTable
.
@JoinTable
must be only on one side of the relation.
Bi-directional relations allow you to join relations from both sides using QueryBuilder
:
const categoriesWithQuestions = await dataSource
.getRepository(Category)
.createQueryBuilder("category")
.leftJoinAndSelect("category.questions", "question")
.getMany()
Many-to-many relations with custom properties
In case you need to have additional properties in your many-to-many relationship, you have to create a new entity yourself.
For example, if you would like entities Post
and Category
to have a many-to-many relationship with an additional order
column, then you need to create an entity PostToCategory
with two ManyToOne
relations pointing in both directions and with custom columns in it:
import { Entity, Column, ManyToOne, PrimaryGeneratedColumn } from "typeorm"
import { Post } from "./post"
import { Category } from "./category"
@Entity()
export class PostToCategory {
@PrimaryGeneratedColumn()
public postToCategoryId: number
@Column()
public postId: number
@Column()
public categoryId: number
@Column()
public order: number
@ManyToOne(() => Post, (post) => post.postToCategories)
public post: Post
@ManyToOne(() => Category, (category) => category.postToCategories)
public category: Category
}
Additionally you will have to add a relationship like the following to Post
and Category
:
// category.ts
...
@OneToMany(() => PostToCategory, postToCategory => postToCategory.category)
public postToCategories: PostToCategory[];
// post.ts
...
@OneToMany(() => PostToCategory, postToCategory => postToCategory.post)
public postToCategories: PostToCategory[];