I'm new in MongoDB.I have read almost all relative posts but cannot find a proper answer for my case. Suppose you have the document:
{ "_id" : "5ad1..",
"linkedin" : { "linkedinId" : "NB..J", "username" : "dolguldur",
"followers":[{name:"John",email:"john#example.com},{name:"Elsa",email:"elsa#example.com}]
}
}
If a follower changes his email, how can i update his record with the new one;
Use the $elemMatch operator to select your desired nested object :
db.collection.update({
followers: {
$elemMatch: {
name: _follower_name,
email: _follower_email
}
}
}, {
"followers.$.email": new_mail
});
The $ positional operator will select the first nested object that match the filter in $elemMatch and update it.
Related
I have a JSON in MongoDB and I am trying to check if at least one of the items in the JSON doesn't contain a specific field.
{
"_id" : 12345,
"orderItems" : [
{
"itemId" : 45678,
"isAvailable" : true,
"isEligible" " false
},
{
"itemId" : 87653,
"isAvailable" : true
}
]
}
So in the above JSON, since the 2nd one under order items doesn't contain iseligible field, I need to get this _id.
I tried the below query so far, which didnt work:
db.getCollection('orders').find({"orderItems.iseligible":{$exists:false})
You can use $elemMatch to evaluate the presence of the nested key. Once that's accomplished, project out the _id value.
db.orders.find({
orderItems: {
$elemMatch: {
"isEligible": {
$exists: false
}
}
}
},
{
_id: 1
})
Here is a Mongo playground with the finished code, and a similar SO answer.
I have a collection called 'Profiles', and it has a structure like this:
{
_id : XXXXX,
classrooms:{
owner:[],
students: [XYSk0,CCD7U],
},
...
}
I want to get profiles that has classrooms.students equals to CCD7U.
I have tried using $elemMatch on the collection publish function, but unsuccessful:
Meteor.publish('StudentsInClassrooms', function(CCD7U){
return Profiles.find({ classrooms : { $elemMatch :{ students : CCD7U }} });
});
I even tried dot notation, but still unsuccessful:
Meteor.publish('StudentsInClassrooms', function(CCD7U){
return Profiles.find({ 'classrooms.students' : CCD7U });
});
How to properly query that kind of nested collection?
You should use the "$in" operator for such query.
Profiles.find({ 'classrooms.students' : { $in :['CCD7U'] } } )
Ref: MongoDB documentation; $in
When you normally query something you would do it
Profiles.find( { 'classrooms': 'classroomName' } );
But because your are trying to find something from nested you need to do it like this
Profiles.find( { 'classrooms': { 'students' : CCD7U } } );
In my mongodb (using Mongoose), I have story collection which has comments sub collection and I want to query the subdocument by client id, as
Story.find({ 'comments.client': id }, { title: 1, 'comments.$': 1 }, function (err, stories) {
...
})
})
The query works except that it only returns the first matched subdocument, but I want it to return all matching subdocuments. Did I miss an option?
EDIT:
On Blakes Seven's tip, I tried the answers from Retrieve only the queried element in an object array in MongoDB collection, but I couldn't make it work.
First tried this:
Story.find({'comments.client': id}, { title: 1, comments: {$elemMatch: { client: id } } }, function (err, stories) {
})
It also returns the first match only.
Then, I tried the accepted answer there:
Story.aggregate({$match: {'comments.client': id} }, {$unwind: '$comments'}, {$match : {'comments.client': id} }, function (err, stories) {
})
but this returns nothing. What is wrong here?
UPDATE:
My data structure looks like this:
{
"_id" : ObjectId("55e2185288fee5a433ceabf5"),
"title" : "test",
"comments" : [
{
"_id" : ObjectId("55e2184e88fee5a433ceaaf5"),
"client" : ObjectId("55e218446033de4e7db3f2a4"),
"time" : ISODate("2015-08-29T20:16:00.000Z")
}
]
}
Here is an example of a document from the collection I am querying
meteor:PRIMARY> db.research.findOne({_id: 'Z2zzA7dx6unkzKiSn'})
{
"_id" : "Z2zzA7dx6unkzKiSn",
"_userId" : "NtE3ANq2b2PbWSEqu",
"collaborators" : [
{
"userId" : "aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4"
}
],
"name" : "new one",
"pending" : {
"collaborators" : [ ]
}
}
I want to find all documents within this collection with either _userId: 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4' or from the collaborators array, userId: 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'
So I want to look though the collection and check if the _userId field is 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'. If not then check the collaborators array on the document and check if there is an object with userId: 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'.
Here is the query I am trying to use:
db.research.find({$or: [{_userId: 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'}, {collaborators: {$in: [{userId: 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'}]}}] })
It does not find the document and gives me a syntax error. What is my issue here? Thanks
The $in operator is basically a simplified version of $or but you really only have one argument here so you should not even need it. Use dot notation instead:
db.research.find({
'$or': [
{ '_userId': 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'},
{ 'collaborators.userId': 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'}
]
})
If you need more than one value then use $in:
db.research.find({
'$or': [
{ '_userId': 'aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4'},
{ 'collaborators.userId': {
'$in': ['aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX4','aTPzFad8DdFXxRrX5']
}}
]
})
What I'm trying to do is pretty straightforward, but I can't find out how to give one field the value of another.
I simply want to update one field with the character count of another.
db.collection.update({$exists:true},{$set : {field1 : field2.length}})
I've tried giving it dot notation
db.collection.update({$exits:true},{$set : {field1: "this.field2.length"}})
As well as using javascript syntax
db.collection.update({$exits:true},
{$set : {field1: {$where : "this.field2.length"}})
But just copied the string and got a "notOkforstorage" respectively. Any help?
Update:
I only get the "notOkforStorage" when I query by ID:
db.collection.update({_id:ObjectID("38289842bbb")},
{$set : {field1: {$where :"this.field2.length"}}})
Try the following code:
db.collection.find(your_querry).forEach(function(doc) {
doc.field1 = doc.field2.length;
db.collection.save(doc);
});
You can use your_querry to select only part of the original collection do perform an update. If you want to process an entire collection, use your_querry = {}.
If you want all operations to be atomic, use update instead of save:
db.collection.find( your_querry, { field2: 1 } ).forEach(function(doc) {
db.collection.update({ _id: doc._id },{ $set: { field1: doc.field2.length } } );
});
Starting Mongo 4.2, db.collection.update() can accept an aggregation pipeline, finally allowing the update/creation of a field based on another field:
// { "_id" : ObjectId("5e84c..."), "field1" : 12, "field2" : "world" }
db.collection.update(
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e84c...") },
[{ $set: { field1: { $strLenCP: "$field2" } } }]
)
// { "_id" : ObjectId("5e84c..."), "field1" : 5, "field2" : "world" }
The first part {} is the match query, filtering which documents to update.
The second part [{ $set: { field1: { $strLenCP: "$field2" } } }] is the update aggregation pipeline (note the squared brackets signifying the use of an aggregation pipeline). $set is a new aggregation operator and an alias for $addFields. Any aggregation operator can be used within the $set stage; in our case $strLenCP which provides the length of field2.
As far I know the easiest way is the read and write aproach:
//At first, get/prepare your new value:
var d= db.yourColl.fetchOne({....});
d.field1== d.field2.length;
// then update with your new value
db.yourColl.save(d);
Your are using exists in the wrong way.
Syntax: { field: { $exists: <boolean> } }
You use of $where is also incorrect
Use the $where operator to pass either a string containing a JavaScript expression or a full JavaScript function to the query system
db.myCollection.find( { $where: "this.credits == this.debits" } );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: "obj.credits == obj.debits" } );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: function() { return (this.credits == this.debits) } } );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: function() { return obj.credits == obj.debits; } } );
I think you should use Map-Reduce for what you are trying to do.