In MongoDB, the $or
aggregation pipeline operator evaluates one or more expressions and returns true
if any evaluate to true
. Otherwise it returns false
.
Syntax
The syntax goes like this:
{ $or: [ <expression1>, <expression2>, ... ] }
Example
Suppose we have a collection called data
with the following document:
{ "_id" : 1, "a" : 10, "b" : 2, "c" : 20 }
Here’s what happens when we use $or
to test for two conditions against that document:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
b: 1,
result: { $or: [
{ $gt: [ "$a", 9 ] },
{ $lt: [ "$b", 1 ] }
] }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 10, "b" : 2, "result" : true }
We can see that $or
returned true
, even though one of the expressions resolves to false
. This is because it returns true
if any of the expressions are true
.
Here it is again, but with both expressions resolving to false
.
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
b: 1,
result: { $or: [
{ $gt: [ "$a", 20 ] },
{ $lt: [ "$b", 1 ] }
] }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 10, "b" : 2, "result" : false }
More than Two Arguments
As mentioned, $or
accepts one or more expressions. The previous example uses two expressions. Here’s an example that uses three:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
b: 1,
c: 1,
result: { $or: [
{ $gt: [ "$a", 9 ] },
{ $lt: [ "$b", 3 ] },
{ $gt: [ "$c", 30 ] }
] }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 10, "b" : 2, "c" : 20, "result" : true }
In this case the result is true
, even though the third value evaluates to false
.
One Argument
Given that $or
accepts one or more expressions, it’s possible to provide a single argument.
Example:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: 1 } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
result: { $or: [
{ $gt: [ "$a", 9 ] }
] }
}
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 10, "result" : true }
Zero, Null, and Undefined Values
The $or
operator evaluates 0
, null
, and undefined
as false
.
Suppose we have the following documents:
{ "_id" : 2, "a" : 0, "b" : 2 } { "_id" : 3, "a" : 10, "b" : 0 } { "_id" : 4, "a" : 0, "b" : 0 } { "_id" : 5, "a" : null, "b" : 2 } { "_id" : 6, "a" : 10, "b" : null } { "_id" : 7, "a" : null, "b" : null } { "_id" : 8, "a" : undefined, "b" : 2 } { "_id" : 9, "a" : 10, "b" : undefined } { "_id" : 10, "a" : undefined, "b" : undefined }
Here’s what happens when we apply $or
:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: { $in: [ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ] } } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
b: 1,
result: { $or: [ "$a", "$b" ] } }
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 0, "b" : 2, "result" : true } { "a" : 10, "b" : 0, "result" : true } { "a" : 0, "b" : 0, "result" : false } { "a" : null, "b" : 2, "result" : true } { "a" : 10, "b" : null, "result" : true } { "a" : null, "b" : null, "result" : false } { "a" : undefined, "b" : 2, "result" : true } { "a" : 10, "b" : undefined, "result" : true } { "a" : undefined, "b" : undefined, "result" : false }
Here, I simply used the field as the expression.
Here’s what it looks like when we apply just one argument to the fields that contain 0
, null
, and undefined
:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: { $in: [ 4, 7, 10 ] } } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
a: 1,
result: { $or: [ "$a" ] } }
}
]
)
Result:
{ "a" : 0, "result" : false } { "a" : null, "result" : false } { "a" : undefined, "result" : false }
All fields return false
.
Invoke $or
with No Arguments
When invoked with no arguments, the $or
operator evaluates to false
.
Example:
db.data.aggregate(
[
{ $match: { _id: { $in: [ 1 ] } } },
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
result: { $or: [ ] } }
}
]
)
Result:
{ "result" : false }