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$ (projection)

Definition

$

The positional $ operator limits the contents of an <array> to return the first element that matches the query condition on the array. To specify an array element to update, see the positional $ operator for updates.

Use $ in the projection document of the find() method or the findOne() method when you only need one particular array element in selected documents.

See the aggregation operator $filter to return an array with only those elements that match the specified condition.

Usage Considerations

Both the $ operator and the $elemMatch operator project the first matching element from an array based on a condition.

The $ operator projects the first matching array element from each document in a collection based on some condition from the query statement.

The $elemMatch projection operator takes an explicit condition argument. This allows you to project based on a condition not in the query, or if you need to project based on multiple fields in the array’s embedded documents. See Array Field Limitations for an example.

db.collection.find() operations on views do not support $ projection operator.

Behavior

Usage Requirements

Given the form:

db.collection.find( { <array>: <value> ... },
                    { "<array>.$": 1 } )
db.collection.find( { <array.field>: <value> ...},
                    { "<array>.$": 1 } )

The <array> field being limited must appear in the query document, and the <value> can be documents that contain query operator expressions.

Array Field Limitations

MongoDB requires the following when dealing with projection over arrays:

  • Only one positional $ operator may appear in the projection document.
  • Only one array field, the one being limited with the $ projection operator, should appear in the query document. Additional array fields in the query document may lead to undefined behavior.
  • The query document should only contain a single condition on the array field being projected. Multiple conditions may override each other internally and lead to undefined behavior.

Under these requirements, the following query is incorrect:

db.collection.find( { <array>: <value>, <someOtherArray>: <value2> },
                    { "<array>.$": 1 } )

To specify criteria on multiple fields of documents inside that array, use the $elemMatch query operator. The following query returns the first document inside a grades array that has a mean of greater than 70 and a grade of greater than 90.

db.students.find( { grades: { $elemMatch: {
                                            mean: { $gt: 70 },
                                            grade: { $gt:90 }
                                          } } },
                  { "grades.$": 1 } )

You must use the $elemMatch operator if you need separate conditions for selecting documents and for choosing fields within those documents.

Sorts and the Positional Operator

When the find() method includes a sort(), the find() method applies the sort() to order the matching documents before it applies the positional $ projection operator.

If an array field contains multiple documents with the same field name and the find() method includes a sort() on that repeating field, the returned documents may not reflect the sort order because the sort was applied to the elements of the array before the $ projection operator.

Examples

Project Array Values

A collection students contains the following documents:

{ "_id" : 1, "semester" : 1, "grades" : [ 70, 87, 90 ] }
{ "_id" : 2, "semester" : 1, "grades" : [ 90, 88, 92 ] }
{ "_id" : 3, "semester" : 1, "grades" : [ 85, 100, 90 ] }
{ "_id" : 4, "semester" : 2, "grades" : [ 79, 85, 80 ] }
{ "_id" : 5, "semester" : 2, "grades" : [ 88, 88, 92 ] }
{ "_id" : 6, "semester" : 2, "grades" : [ 95, 90, 96 ] }

In the following query, the projection { "grades.$": 1 } returns only the first element greater than or equal to 85 for the grades field.

db.students.find( { semester: 1, grades: { $gte: 85 } },
                  { "grades.$": 1 } )

The operation returns the following documents:

{ "_id" : 1, "grades" : [ 87 ] }
{ "_id" : 2, "grades" : [ 90 ] }
{ "_id" : 3, "grades" : [ 85 ] }

Although the array field grades may contain multiple elements that are greater than or equal to 85, the $ projection operator returns only the first matching element from the array.

Project Array Documents

A students collection contains the following documents where the grades field is an array of documents; each document contain the three field names grade, mean, and std:

{ "_id" : 7, semester: 3, "grades" : [ { grade: 80, mean: 75, std: 8 },
                                       { grade: 85, mean: 90, std: 5 },
                                       { grade: 90, mean: 85, std: 3 } ] }

{ "_id" : 8, semester: 3, "grades" : [ { grade: 92, mean: 88, std: 8 },
                                       { grade: 78, mean: 90, std: 5 },
                                       { grade: 88, mean: 85, std: 3 } ] }

In the following query, the projection { "grades.$": 1 } returns only the first element with the mean greater than 70 for the grades field:

db.students.find(
   { "grades.mean": { $gt: 70 } },
   { "grades.$": 1 }
)

The operation returns the following documents:

{ "_id" : 7, "grades" : [  {  "grade" : 80,  "mean" : 75,  "std" : 8 } ] }
{ "_id" : 8, "grades" : [  {  "grade" : 92,  "mean" : 88,  "std" : 8 } ] }

Further Reading

$elemMatch (projection)