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$getField (aggregation)

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  • Definition
  • Syntax
  • Behavior
  • Examples
$getField

New in version 5.0.

Returns the value of a specified field from a document. If you don't specify an object, $getField returns the value of the field from $$CURRENT.

You can use $getField to retrieve the value of fields with names that contain periods (.) or start with dollar signs ($).

Tip

Use $setField to add or update fields with names that contain dollar signs ($) or periods (.).

$getField has the following syntax:

{
$getField: {
field: <String>,
input: <Object>
}
}
Field
Type
Description
field
String

Field in the input object for which you want to return a value. field can be any valid expression that resolves to a string constant.

If field begins with a dollar sign ($), place the field name inside of a $literal expression to return its value.

input
Object

Default: $$CURRENT

A valid expression that contains the field for which you want to return a value. input must resolve to an object, missing, null, or undefined. If omitted, defaults to the document currently being processed in the pipeline ($$CURRENT).

$getField has the following shorthand syntax for retrieving field values from $$CURRENT:

{
$getField: <String>
}

For this syntax, the argument is equivalent to the value of field described above.

  • If field resolves to anything other than a string constant, $getField returns an error.

  • If the field that you specify is not present in the input object, or in $$CURRENT if you don't specify an input object, $getField returns missing.

  • If input evaluates to missing, undefined, or null, $getField returns null.

  • If input evaluates to anything other than an object, missing, undefined, or null, $getField returns an error.

  • $getField doesn't implicitly traverse objects or arrays. For example, $getField evaluates a field value of a.b.c as a top-level field a.b.c instead of a nested field { a: { b: { c: } } }.

Tip

See also:

Consider an inventory collection with the following documents:

{ "_id" : 1, "item" : "sweatshirt", "price.usd": 45.99, qty: 300 }
{ "_id" : 2, "item" : "winter coat", "price.usd": 499.99, qty: 200 }
{ "_id" : 3, "item" : "sun dress", "price.usd": 199.99, qty: 250 }
{ "_id" : 4, "item" : "leather boots", "price.usd": 249.99, qty: 300 }
{ "_id" : 5, "item" : "bow tie", "price.usd": 9.99, qty: 180 }

The following operation uses the $getField and $gt operators to find which products have a price.usd greater than 200:

db.inventory.aggregate( [
{
$match:
{ $expr:
{ $gt: [ { $getField: "price.usd" }, 200 ] }
}
}
] )

The operation returns the following results:

[
{ _id: 2, item: 'winter coat', qty: 200, 'price.usd': 499.99 },
{ _id: 4, item: 'leather boots', qty: 300, 'price.usd': 249.99 }
]

Consider an inventory collection with the following documents:

{ "_id" : 1, "item" : "sweatshirt", "$price": 45.99, qty: 300 }
{ "_id" : 2, "item" : "winter coat", "$price": 499.99, qty: 200 }
{ "_id" : 3, "item" : "sun dress", "$price": 199.99, qty: 250 }
{ "_id" : 4, "item" : "leather boots", "$price": 249.99, qty: 300 }
{ "_id" : 5, "item" : "bow tie", "$price": 9.99, qty: 180 }

The following operation uses the $getField, $gt, and $literal operators to find which products have a $price greater than 200:

db.inventory.aggregate( [
{
$match:
{ $expr:
{ $gt: [ { $getField: {$literal: "$price" } }, 200 ] }
}
}
] )

The operation returns the following results:

[
{ _id: 2, item: 'winter coat', qty: 200, '$price': 499.99 },
{ _id: 4, item: 'leather boots', qty: 300, '$price': 249.99 }
]

Create an inventory collection with the following documents:

db.inventory.insertMany( [
{ "_id" : 1, "item" : "sweatshirt", "price.usd": 45.99,
"quantity": { "$large": 50, "$medium": 50, "$small": 25 }
},
{ "_id" : 2, "item" : "winter coat", "price.usd": 499.99,
"quantity": { "$large": 35, "$medium": 35, "$small": 35 }
},
{ "_id" : 3, "item" : "sun dress", "price.usd": 199.99,
"quantity": { "$large": 45, "$medium": 40, "$small": 5 }
},
{ "_id" : 4, "item" : "leather boots", "price.usd": 249.99,
"quantity": { "$large": 20, "$medium": 30, "$small": 40 }
},
{ "_id" : 5, "item" : "bow tie", "price.usd": 9.99,
"quantity": { "$large": 0, "$medium": 10, "$small": 75 }
}
] )

The following operation returns documents where the number of $small items is less than or equal to 20.

db.inventory.aggregate( [
{ $match:
{ $expr:
{ $lte:
[
{ $getField:
{ field: { $literal: "$small" },
input: "$quantity"
}
},
20
]
}
}
}
] )

Use these operators to query the collection:

  • The $lte operator finds values less than or equal to 20.

  • $getField requires explicit field and input parameters because the $small field is part of a sub-document.

  • $getField uses $literal to evaluate "$small", because the field name has a dollar sign ($) in it.

Example output:

[
{
_id: 3,
item: 'sun dress',
'price.usd': 199.99,
quantity: { '$large': 45, '$medium': 40, '$small': 5 }
}
]
←  $function (aggregation)$gt (aggregation) →