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I returned mongoose docs as json in this way:

UserModel.find({}, function (err, users) {
    return res.end(JSON.stringify(users));
}

However, user.__proto__ was also returned. How can I return without it? I tried this but not worked:

UserModel.find({}, function (err, users) {
    return res.end(users.toJSON());    // has no method 'toJSON'
}
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3 Answers

You may also try mongoosejs's lean() :

UserModel.find().lean().exec(function (err, users) {
    return res.end(users.toJSON());
}
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OK, it seems to be the answer. – trantor Jan 4 at 14:50
1  
Shouldn't it be: JSON.stringify(users); since the docs returned with lean() are plain JS objects? – enyo Jan 9 at 14:30

First of all, try toObject() instead of toJSON() maybe?

Secondly, you'll need to call it on the actual documents and not the array, so maybe try something more annoying like this:

var flatUsers = users.map(function() {
  return user.toObject();
})
return res.end(JSON.stringify(flatUsers));

It's a guess, but I hope it helps

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up vote 2 down vote accepted

I found out I made a mistake. There's no need to call toObject() or toJSON() at all. The __proto__ in the question came from jquery, not mongoose. Here's my test:

UserModel.find({}, function (err, users) {
    console.log(users.save);    // { [Function] numAsyncPres: 0 }
    var json = JSON.stringify(users);
    users = users.map(function (user) {
        return user.toObject();
    }
    console.log(user.save);    // undefined
    console.log(json == JSON.stringify(users));    // true
}

doc.toObject() removes doc.prototype from a doc. But it makes no difference in JSON.stringify(doc). And it's not needed in this case.

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