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$in

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  • Compatibility
  • Syntax
  • Query Data on Atlas by Using Atlas Search
  • Examples
  • Use the $in Operator to Match Values
  • Use the $in Operator to Match Values in an Array
  • Use the $in Operator with a Regular Expression
$in

The $in operator selects the documents where the value of a field equals any value in the specified array.

You can use $in for deployments hosted in the following environments:

  • MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud

To specify an $in expression, use the following prototype:

{ field: { $in: [<value1>, <value2>, ... <valueN> ] } }

For comparison of different BSON type values, see the specified BSON comparison order.

If the field holds an array, then the $in operator selects the documents whose field holds an array that contains at least one element that matches a value in the specified array (for example, <value1>, <value2>, and so on).

The $in operator compares each parameter to each document in the collection, which can lead to performance issues. To improve performance:

  • It is recommended that you limit the number of parameters passed to the
    $in operator to tens of values. Using hundreds of parameters or more can negatively impact query performance.
  • Create an index on the field you want to query.

Note

This document describes the $in query operator. For the $in aggregation operator, see $in (aggregation).

For data stored in MongoDB Atlas, you can use the Atlas Search in operator when running $search queries. Running $in after $search is less performant than running $search with the in operator.

To learn more about the Atlas Search version of this operator, see the in operator in the Atlas documentation.

Create the inventory collection:

db.inventory.insertMany( [
{ "item": "Pens", "quantity": 350, "tags": [ "school", "office" ] },
{ "item": "Erasers", "quantity": 15, "tags": [ "school", "home" ] },
{ "item": "Maps", "tags": [ "office", "storage" ] },
{ "item": "Books", "quantity": 5, "tags": [ "school", "storage", "home" ] }
] )

Consider the following example:

db.inventory.find( { quantity: { $in: [ 5, 15 ] } }, { _id: 0 } )

This query selects all documents in the inventory collection where the value of the quantity field is either 5 or 15.

{ item: 'Erasers', quantity: 15, tags: [ 'school', 'home' ] },
{ item: 'Books', quantity: 5, tags: [ 'school', 'storage', 'home' ] }

Although you can write this query using the $or operator, use the $in operator rather than the $or operator when performing equality checks on the same field.

The following updateMany() operation sets the exclude field to false when the tags array has at least one element that matches either "home" or "school".

db.inventory.updateMany(
{ tags: { $in: [ "home", "school" ] } },
{ $set: { exclude: false } }
)

Example output:

{
item: 'Pens',
quantity: 350,
tags: [ 'school', 'office' ],
exclude: false
},
{
item: 'Erasers',
quantity: 15,
tags: [ 'school', 'home' ],
exclude: false
},
{
item: 'Books',
quantity: 5,
tags: [ 'school', 'storage', 'home' ],
exclude: false
}

For additional examples in querying arrays, see:

For additional examples in querying, see:

The $in operator can specify matching values using regular expressions of the form /pattern/. You cannot use $regex operator expressions inside an $in.

Consider the following example:

db.inventory.find( { tags: { $in: [ /^be/, /^st/ ] } } )

This query selects all documents in the inventory collection where the tags field holds either a string that starts with be or st or an array with at least one element that starts with be or st.

Tip

See also:

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