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Putting Data (v0.2.x)

Jesse Gibson edited this page Jan 26, 2016 · 6 revisions

It's easiest to initially think about gun as a field/value store, where JavaScript objects can be stored and retrieved based on identifier keys. A key can be any valid string; keys don't have to follow any particular pattern, although key patterns may be useful for applications.

In this example, we'll look at the following objects:

// Sarah Jane (Human)
{
    "name": "Sarah Jane Smith",
    "species": "human",
    "location": "London"
}

// K-9 (Canine)
{
    "name": "K-9",
    "species": "canine"
}

Note: This tutorial assumes that you've already set up a connection to gun, and that the connection is represented by the variable gun. You can read more about getting started on the wire specification page.

To start off, we'll save Sarah Jane to the key person/sarahjane

gun.put({
    "name": "Sarah Jane Smith",
    "species": "human",
    "location": "London"
}).key('companion/sarahjane');

Thanks to the chaining that is built into GUN, we can really easily assign multiple keys to the same object, too. For example, if we wanted to access Cecil at both person/cecil and human/1, we could do that as follows

gun.put({
    "name": "Sarah Jane Smith",
    "species": "human",
    "location": "London"
}).key('companion/sarahjane').key('human/1');

Now, both companions/sarahjane and human/1 can be used to look up the same object.

Next, we want to establish that K-9 belongs to Sarah Jane. We can do that by using set again to set a particular value of Sarah Jane, which we will refer to as k9.

gun.get('companion/sarahjane').path('canine').put({
    "name": "K-9",
    "species": "canine"
});

In the above example, we tell gun to load the object at the companion/sarahjane key (which we just set up earlier), then step into the object to the canine field, which we set to K-9's object. We can also rely on gun's chaining once again to set a separate key that K-9 can be accessed at as well.

gun.get('companion/sarahjane').path('canine').put({
    "name": "K-9",
    "species": "canine"
}).key('canine/k9');

For more information on getting data from GUN, check out the Getting Data wiki page.

This wiki is where all the GUN website documentation comes from.

You can read it here or on the website, but the website has some special features like rendering some markdown extensions to create interactive coding tutorials.

Please feel free to improve the docs itself, we need contributions!

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