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- $indexOfArray (aggregation)
$indexOfArray (aggregation)¶
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Definition¶
-
$indexOfArray¶ New in version 3.4.
Searches an array for an occurence of a specified value and returns the array index (zero-based) of the first occurence. If the value is not found, returns
-1.$indexOfArrayhas the following operator expression syntax:Field Type Description <array>string Can be any valid expression as long as it resolves to an array. For more information on expressions, see Expressions.
If the array expression resolves to a value of
nullor refers to a field that is missing,$indexOfArrayreturnsnull.If the array expression does not resolve to an array or
nullnor refers to a missing field,$indexOfArrayreturns an error.<search value>string Can be any valid expression. For more information on expressions, see Expressions. <start>integer Optional. An integer, or a number that can be represented as integers (such as 2.0), that specifies the starting index position for the search. Can be any valid expression that resolves to a non-negative integral number.
If unspecified, the starting index position for the search is the beginning of the string.
<end>integer Optional. An integer, or a number that can be represented as integers (such as 2.0), that specifies the ending index position for the search. Can be any valid expression that resolves to a non-negative integral number. If you specify a
<end>index value, you should also specify a<start>index value; otherwise,$indexOfArrayuses the<end>value as the<start>index value instead of the<end>value.If unspecified, the ending index position for the search is the end of the string.
Behavior¶
If the <search expression> is found multiple times within the
<array expression>, then $indexOfArray returns the
index of the first <search expression> from the starting index
position.
$indexOfArray returns null:
- If
<array expression>is null, or - If
<array expression>refers to a non-existing field in the input document.
$indexOfArray returns an error:
- If
<array expression>is not an array and not null, or - If
<start>or<end>is a negative integer (or a value that can be represented as a negative integer, like -5.0).
$indexOfArray returns -1:
- If the <search expression> is not found in the array, or
- If
<start>is a number greater than<end>, or - If
<start>is a number greater than the length of the array.
| Example | Results |
|---|---|
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ "a", "abc" ], "a" ] } |
0 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ "a", "abc", "de", ["de"] ], ["de"] ] } |
3 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ 1, 2 ], 5 ] } |
-1 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ 1, 2, 3 ], [1, 2] ] } |
-1 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ 10, 9, 9, 8, 9 ], 9, 3 ] } |
4 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ "a", "abc", "b" ], "b", 0, 1 ] } |
-1 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ "a", "abc", "b" ], "b", 1, 0 ] } |
-1 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ "a", "abc", "b" ], "b", 20 ] } |
-1 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ [ null, null, null ], null ] } |
0 |
{ $indexOfArray: [ null, "foo" ] } |
null |
{ $indexOfArray: [ "foo", "foo" ] } |
Error |
Examples¶
Consider an inventory collection with the following documents:
The following operation uses the $indexOfArray operator to
return the array index at which the string foo is located in each items array:
The operation returns the following results:
See also
$indexOfBytes, $indexOfCP, and $in