
It provides a Graphical User Interface (GUI) to interact with.

I will be embedding this episode of Plugging in The Holes along with a transcript in the form of a post on for your hearing and reading pleasure. Robo 3T, formerly known as Robomongo is a popular resource for MongoDB hosting deployments. What did I learn from this? Perhaps when working locally, Robo 3T is better to use, but when working in production, MongoDB Compass is better. So I switched to Robo 3T, which IS able to handle binary image data. And BTW, the binary data is too long to show up completely in Terminal as well. It was too long for it to handle! It only provided me with a small, initial chunk. Previously known as Robomongo, Robo 3T aims to make working with MongoDB databases much easier, providing a user-friendly GUI for managing documents and editing their content without effort. Provide a collection name and click Create. Right-click the database and choose Add Collection. Right-click the host and choose Add Database.

However, at one point I was working with binary image data, and MongoDB Compass was not able to provide me with the complete binary data. To create a database, collection, and documents using Studio 3T, perform the following steps: In Connection Manager, highlight the connection and click Connect. My initial go-to for accessing my local database was the Mongo Shell and MongoDB Compass.

Lately, I have been working on a backend REST API using Node.js, Express, and MongoDB. Link to Binary Data: MongoDB Compass vs Robo 3T vs Local Mongo Shell podcast on anchorfm.
