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You’ve probably all seen the following warning by now:


I’m guessing the deprecated behavior might still work well into 2022, but if you want to future-proof your scripts right now and/or depend on the old behavior, here’s the cleanest, functional way of mimicking it I’ve found so far:


const 
table = base.getTable(yourTableName),
fields = table.fields.map( f => f.name),
query = await table.selectRecordsAsync({fields})

This particular destructuring syntax obviously depends on your scope being clean.


But in practice, I’d usually just write this:


const
table = base.getTable(yourTableName),
query = await table.selectRecordsAsync({
fields:table.fields.map(f=>f.name)
})

Either way, I figured I’ll share this and ask if anyone has figured out a quicker method.

Hi @Dominik_Bosnjak,


I use the “fields” array directly from the table; there´s no need to “map” the “fields” array.


const Table = base.getTable("TableName");
const query = await Table.selectRecordsAsync({ fields: Table.fields });

Best

Sergio

https://devblocks.agency

If this reply fixed your problem, please mark it as a solution ✅


Hi @Dominik_Bosnjak,


I use the “fields” array directly from the table; there´s no need to “map” the “fields” array.


const Table = base.getTable("TableName");
const query = await Table.selectRecordsAsync({ fields: Table.fields });

Best

Sergio

https://devblocks.agency

If this reply fixed your problem, please mark it as a solution ✅


Awesome, didn’t know you could just pass an entire field object like that, cheers.


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