mongo
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The following document pertains to the mongo
shell, included in the MongoDB Server Download. For information on the new MongoDB Shell (mongosh
) refer to the mongosh documentation.
To understand the differences between the two shells, see Comparison of the mongo
Shell and mongosh
.
MongoDB BSON provides support for additional data types than JSON. Drivers provide native support for these data types in host languages and the mongo
shell also provides several helper classes to support the use of these data types in the mongo
JavaScript shell. See the Extended JSON reference for additional information.
The mongo
shell provides various methods to return the date, either as a string or as a Date
object:
Date()
method which returns the current date as a string.new Date()
constructor which returns a Date
object using the ISODate()
wrapper.ISODate()
constructor which returns a Date
object using the ISODate()
wrapper.Internally, Date objects are stored as a signed 64-bit integer representing the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (Jan 1, 1970).
Not all database operations and drivers support the full 64-bit range. You may safely work with dates with years within the inclusive range 0
through 9999
.
To return the date as a string, use the Date()
method, as in the following example:
var myDateString = Date();
To print the value of the variable, type the variable name in the shell, as in the following:
myDateString
The result is the value of myDateString
:
Wed Dec 19 2012 01:03:25 GMT-0500 (EST)
To verify the type, use the typeof
operator, as in the following:
typeof myDateString
The operation returns string
.
Date
The mongo
shell wraps objects of Date
type with the ISODate
helper; however, the objects remain of type Date
.
The following example uses both the new Date()
constructor and the ISODate()
constructor to return Date
objects.
var myDate = new Date(); var myDateInitUsingISODateWrapper = ISODate();
You can use the new
operator with the ISODate()
constructor as well.
To print the value of the variable, type the variable name in the shell, as in the following:
myDate
The result is the Date
value of myDate
wrapped in the ISODate()
helper:
ISODate("2012-12-19T06:01:17.171Z")
To verify the type, use the instanceof
operator, as in the following:
myDate instanceof Date myDateInitUsingISODateWrapper instanceof Date
The operation returns true
for both.
The mongo
shell provides the ObjectId()
wrapper class around the ObjectId data type. To generate a new ObjectId, use the following operation in the mongo
shell:
new ObjectId
The mongo
shell treats all numbers as floating-point values by default. The mongo
shell provides the NumberLong()
wrapper to handle 64-bit integers.
The NumberLong()
wrapper accepts the long as a string:
NumberLong("2090845886852")
The following examples use the NumberLong()
wrapper to write to the collection:
db.collection.insertOne( { _id: 10, calc: NumberLong("2090845886852") } ) db.collection.updateOne( { _id: 10 }, { $set: { calc: NumberLong("2555555000000") } } ) db.collection.updateOne( { _id: 10 }, { $inc: { calc: NumberLong("5") } } )
Retrieve the document to verify:
db.collection.findOne( { _id: 10 } )
In the returned document, the calc
field contains a NumberLong
object:
{ "_id" : 10, "calc" : NumberLong("2555555000005") }
If you use the $inc
to increment the value of a field that contains a NumberLong
object by a float, the data type changes to a floating point value, as in the following example:
Use $inc
to increment the calc
field by 5
, which the mongo
shell treats as a float:
db.collection.updateOne( { _id: 10 }, { $inc: { calc: 5 } } )
Retrieve the updated document:
db.collection.findOne( { _id: 10 } )
In the updated document, the calc
field contains a floating point value:
{ "_id" : 10, "calc" : 2555555000010 }
Although the NumberLong()
constructor accepts integer
values from the mongo
shell (i.e. without quotes), this is not recommended. Specifying an integer value larger than JavaScript's defined Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER
(which is the number 2^53 - 1
) may lead to unexpected behavior.
The mongo
shell treats all numbers as floating-point values by default. The mongo
shell provides the NumberInt()
constructor to explicitly specify 32-bit integers.
The mongo
shell treats all numbers as 64-bit floating-point double
values by default. The mongo
shell provides the NumberDecimal()
constructor to explicitly specify 128-bit decimal-based floating-point values capable of emulating decimal rounding with exact precision. This functionality is intended for applications that handle monetary data, such as financial, tax, and scientific computations.
The decimal
BSON type uses the IEEE 754 decimal128 floating-point numbering format which supports 34 decimal digits (i.e. significant digits) and an exponent range of −6143 to +6144.
The NumberDecimal()
constructor accepts the decimal
value as a string:
NumberDecimal("1000.55")
The value is stored in the database as follows:
NumberDecimal("1000.55")
The NumberDecimal()
constructor also accepts double
values from the mongo
shell (i.e. without quotes), although this is not recommended due to the risk of losing precision. The constructor creates a binary-based double
precision representation of the decimal-based parameter (potentially losing precision), then converts that value to a decimal
value with a precision of 15 digits. The following example passes the value implicitly as a double
and shows how it is created with a precision of 15 digits:
NumberDecimal(1000.55)
The value is stored in the database as follows:
NumberDecimal("1000.55000000000")
The following example passes the value implicitly as a double
and shows how a loss of precision can occur:
NumberDecimal(9999999.4999999999)
The value is stored in the database as follows:
NumberDecimal("9999999.50000000")
To use the decimal
data type with a MongoDB driver, be sure to use a driver version that supports it.
Values of the decimal
type are compared and sorted with other numeric types based on their actual numeric value. Numeric values of the binary-based double
type generally have approximate representations of decimal-based values and may not be exactly equal to their decimal
representations, so use the NumberDecimal()
constructor when checking the equality of decimal
values. Consider the following examples with the following documents in the numbers
collection:
{ "_id" : 1, "val" : NumberDecimal( "9.99" ), "description" : "Decimal" } { "_id" : 2, "val" : 9.99, "description" : "Double" } { "_id" : 3, "val" : 10, "description" : "Double" } { "_id" : 4, "val" : NumberLong("10"), "description" : "Long" } { "_id" : 5, "val" : NumberDecimal( "10.0" ), "description" : "Decimal" }
When the queries from the table below are plugged into the db.numbers.find(<query>)
method, the following results are returned:
Query | Results |
---|---|
{ "val": 9.99 } | { "_id": 2, "val": 9.99, "description": "Double" } |
{ "val": NumberDecimal( "9.99" ) } | { "_id": 1, "val": NumberDecimal( "9.99" ), "description": "Decimal" } |
{ val: 10 } | { "_id": 3, "val": 10, "description": "Double" }
{ "_id": 4, "val": NumberLong(10), "description": "Long" }
{ "_id": 5, "val": NumberDecimal( "10.0" ), "description": "Decimal" }
|
{ val: NumberDecimal( "10" ) } | { "_id": 3, "val": 10, "description": "Double" }
{ "_id": 4, "val": NumberLong(10), "description": "Long" }
{ "_id": 5, "val": NumberDecimal( "10.0" ), "description": "Decimal" }
|
The first query, { "val": 9.99 }
, implicitly searches for the double
representation of 9.99
which is not equal to the decimal
representation of the value.
The NumberDecimal()
constructor is used to query for the document with the decimal
representation of 9.99
. Values of the double
type are excluded because they do not match the exact value of the decimal
representation of 9.99
.
Matching values of all numeric types are returned when querying for whole numbers. For example, querying for a double
representation of 10
will include a decimal
representation of 10.0
in the results and vice versa.
decimal
TypeTo test for decimal
type, use the $type
operator with the string alias "decimal"
or 19
, the numeric code for the decimal
type.
db.inventory.find( { price: { $type: "decimal" } } )
mongo
ShellTo determine the type of fields, the mongo
shell provides the instanceof
and typeof
operators.
instanceof
instanceof
returns a boolean to test if a value is an instance of some type.
For example, the following operation tests whether the _id
field is an instance of type ObjectId
:
mydoc._id instanceof ObjectId
The operation returns true
.
typeof
typeof
returns the type of a field.
For example, the following operation returns the type of the _id
field:
typeof mydoc._id
In this case typeof
will return the more generic object
type rather than ObjectId
type.