--- title: Make Useful Apis in Angularjs --- There are two more things you have to do before this to be useful to you, however. Say you want to show all the _things_ associated with the username requested with that page: you must first 1. Have a "username" or "owner" field in your _thing_ schema at `/server/api/thing/thing.model.js` 2. Write a custom route in `/server/api/thing/index.js` to catch a request for a specific username. The request from your frontend might look something like: $http.get('/api/things/' + username).success( … ) so you'll add a line into your `index.js` like: router.get('/:user', controller.indexUser); and then in `thing.controller.js` you'll write an _exports.indexUser_ function like so: exports.indexUser = function(req, res) { Thing.find({owner:req.params.user}, function (err, things) { if(err) return res.send(500, err); res.json(200, things); }); }; Warning!!! this method only works right if usernames are absolutely unique between users. The default authentication system that comes with the angular-fullstack generator does not have unique usernames, so you're probably better off using the _user._id_ field to determine unique users in your database for now, unless you want to implement unique user names yourself by altering your `/api/user/user.model.js`, `/api/user/user.controller.js`, and your `/app/client/account/signup/signup.controller.js`. Thankfully, you should know how to go about doing all that after reading this guide!