in
Definition
The in
operator performs a search for an array of BSON number
,
date
, boolean
, objectId
, uuid
, or string
values at the given
path and returns documents where the value of the field equals any value
in the specified array. 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 any value in the specified
array.
Syntax
The in
operator has the following syntax:
{ $search: { "index": <index name>, // optional, defaults to "default" "in": { "path": "<field-to-search>", "score": <options>, "value": <single-or-array-of-values-to-search> } } }
Fields
Field | Type | Description | Necessity |
---|---|---|---|
path | string | Indexed field to search. You can also specify a wildcard path to search. See path construction for more information. | Required |
score | object | Score to assign to matching search term results. Use one of the following options to modify the score:
| Optional |
value | Required |
Examples
The following examples use the in
operator to query collections in
the sample_analytics.customers collection. If
you load the sample data on your Atlas cluster and create an Atlas Search index named default
that uses
static mappings on the collection, you
can run the following queries against the collections.
Sample Index
The sample index definition specifies the following actions to support
in
operator queries against the indexed fields in the collection:
Automatically index all the dynamically indexable fields in the collection.
Statically index the
name
field as the token type and converts the text in the field to lowercase.
{ "mappings": { "index": "default", "dynamic": true, "fields": { "name": { "normalizer": "lowercase", "type": "token" } } } }
To learn how to create an Atlas Search index, see Create an Atlas Search Index.
Sample Queries
The following query uses the in
operator to search the
birthdate
field, which contains a single value, for customers
who were born on given dates. The query uses the
$project
stage to:
Omit the
_id
field in the results.Include only the
name
andbirthdate
fields in the results.
1 db.customers.aggregate([ 2 { 3 "$search": { 4 "in": { 5 "path": "birthdate", 6 "value": [ISODate("1977-03-02T02:20:31.000+00:00"), ISODate("1977-03-01T00:00:00.000+00:00"), ISODate("1977-05-06T21:57:35.000+00:00")] 7 } 8 } 9 }, 10 { 11 "$project": { 12 "_id": 0, 13 "name": 1, 14 "birthdate": 1 15 } 16 } 17 ])
1 [ 2 { 3 name: 'Elizabeth Ray', 4 birthdate: ISODate("1977-03-02T02:20:31.000Z") 5 }, 6 { 7 name: 'Brad Cardenas', 8 birthdate: ISODate("1977-05-06T21:57:35.000Z") 9 } 10 ]
Atlas Search returns two documents that it matches with the dates specified in the query.
The following query uses the in
operator to query the
accounts
field, which contains an array of numbers, for
customers with account numbers 371138
, 371139
, or
371140
. The query uses the $project
stage to:
Omit the
_id
field in the results.Include only the
name
andaccounts
fields in the results.
1 db.customers.aggregate([ 2 { 3 "$search": { 4 "in": { 5 "path": "accounts", 6 "value": [371138, 371139, 371140] 7 } 8 } 9 }, 10 { 11 "$project": { 12 "_id": 0, 13 "name": 1, 14 "accounts": 1 15 } 16 } 17 ])
1 [ 2 { 3 name: 'Elizabeth Ray', 4 accounts: [ 371138, 324287, 276528, 332179, 422649, 387979 ] 5 } 6 ]
Atlas Search returns only one document that it matches with the account
number 371138
specified in the query.
The following query uses the text
operator to query for
customers whose first name is James
in the name
field.
The query specifies preference using the in
operator for
customers associated with the given objectIds in the _id
field. The query uses $limit
stage to limit the output
to 5 results and the $project
stage to:
Include only the
_id
andname
fields in the results.Add a field named
score
to the results.
1 db.customers.aggregate([ 2 { 3 "$search": { 4 "compound": { 5 "must": [{ 6 "in": { 7 "path": "name", 8 "value": ["james sanchez", "jennifer lawrence"] 9 } 10 }], 11 "should": [{ 12 "in": { 13 "path": "_id", 14 "value": [ObjectId("5ca4bbcea2dd94ee58162a72"), ObjectId("5ca4bbcea2dd94ee58162a91")] 15 } 16 }] 17 } 18 } 19 }, 20 { 21 "$limit": 5 22 }, 23 { 24 "$project": { 25 "_id": 1, 26 "name": 1, 27 "score": { $meta: "searchScore" } 28 } 29 } 30 ])
1 [ 2 { 3 _id: ObjectId("5ca4bbcea2dd94ee58162a72"), 4 name: 'James Sanchez', 5 score: 2 6 }, 7 { 8 _id: ObjectId("5ca4bbcea2dd94ee58162a71"), 9 name: 'Jennifer Lawrence', 10 score: 1 11 } 12 ]
Atlas Search returns documents that contain James Sanchez
and
Jennifer Lawrence
in the name
field. Atlas Search scores the
document that contains name: 'James Sanchez'
higher because it
matches the ObjectId
specified in the should
clause.