In MongoDB, the $sin
aggregation pipeline operator returns the sine of a value that is measured in radians.
$sin
accepts any valid expression that resolves to a number.
The $sin
operator was introduced in MongoDB 4.2.
Example
Suppose we have a collection called test
with the following document:
{ "_id" : 1, "data" : 2 }
We can use the $sin
operator to return the sine of the data
field:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: "$data" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : 0.9092974268256817 }
Convert to Radians
As mentioned, $sin
returns the sine of a value that is measured in radians. If the value is in degrees, you can use the $degreesToRadians
operator to convert it to radians.
Example:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $degreesToRadians: { $sin: "$data" } }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : 0.015870233978020357 }
128-Bit Decimal Values
By default, the $sin
operator returns values as a double
, but it can also return values as a 128-bit decimal as long as the expression resolves to a 128-bit decimal value.
Suppose we add the following document to our collection:
{ "_id" : 2, "data" : NumberDecimal("2.1301023541559787031443874490659") }
Let’s run the the $sin
operator against that document:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 2 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: "$data" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : NumberDecimal("0.8476235356531703096519423201190329") }
The output is 128-bit decimal.
Null Values
Null values return null
when using the $sin
operator.
Suppose we add the following document to our collection:
{ "_id" : 3, "data" : null }
Let’s run the the $sin
operator against that document:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 3 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: "$data" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : null }
We can see that the result is null
.
NaN Values
If the argument resolves to NaN
, $sin
returns NaN
.
Example:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: 1 * "$data" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : NaN }
Non-Existent Fields
If the $sin
operator is applied against a field that doesn’t exist, null
is returned.
Example:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: "$name" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "sine" : null }
Infinity
Providing Infinity
or -Infinity
will return an out of range error.
Suppose we add the following document to the collection:
{ "_id" : 4, "data" : Infinity }
Let’s run $sin
again:
db.test.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 4 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
sine: { $sin: "$data" }
}
}
]
)
Result:
uncaught exception: Error: command failed: { "ok" : 0, "errmsg" : "cannot apply $sin to inf, value must in (-inf,inf)", "code" : 50989, "codeName" : "Location50989" } : aggregate failed : _getErrorWithCode@src/mongo/shell/utils.js:25:13 doassert@src/mongo/shell/assert.js:18:14 _assertCommandWorked@src/mongo/shell/assert.js:618:17 assert.commandWorked@src/mongo/shell/assert.js:708:16 DB.prototype._runAggregate@src/mongo/shell/db.js:266:5 DBCollection.prototype.aggregate@src/mongo/shell/collection.js:1046:12 @(shell):1:1