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Lære Organizing Code with Modules | Dependency Injection and Modules
Building Backend Applications with Nest.js

bookOrganizing Code with Modules

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As your application grows, keeping everything in a single module becomes difficult to manage.

Instead of placing all controllers and services in app.module.ts, you can create separate modules for different features.

For example, create a module for users:

users.module.ts

Add the following code:

import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { UsersController } from './users.controller';
import { UsersService } from './users.service';

@Module({
  controllers: [UsersController],
  providers: [UsersService],
})
export class UsersModule {}

This module groups everything related to users.

Now connect it to the main module:

import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { UsersModule } from './users.module';

@Module({
  imports: [UsersModule],
})
export class AppModule {}

Here is what is happening:

  • UsersModule: contains user-related logic;
  • imports: connects the module to the application;
  • The main module stays clean and minimal.

Instead of one large file, your application is now split into smaller, focused parts.

This makes your code easier to navigate and maintain.

question mark

Which property is used to include a module inside another module?

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Seksjon 4. Kapittel 4
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