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407 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
---
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language: MongoDB
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filename: mongo.js
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contributors:
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- ["Raj Piskala", "https://www.rajpiskala.ml/"]
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---
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MongoDB is a NoSQL document database for high volume data storage.
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MongoDB uses collections and documents for its storage. Each document consists
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of key-value pairs using JSON-like syntax, similar to a dictionary or JavaScript
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object.
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Likewise, as MongoDB is a NoSQL database, it uses its own query language, Mongo
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Query Language (MQL) which uses JSON for querying.
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## Getting Started
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### Installation
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MongoDB can either be installed locally following the instructions
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[here](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/installation/) or you can create a
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remotely-hosted free 512 MB cluster
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[here](https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/atlas/register). Links to videos with
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instructions on setup are at the bottom.
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This tutorial assumes that you have the MongoDB Shell from
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[here](https://www.mongodb.com/try/download/shell). You can also download the
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graphical tool, MongoDB Compass, down below from the same link.
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### Components
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After installing MongoDB, you will notice there are multiple command line tools.
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The three most important of which are:
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- `mongod` - The database server which is responsible for managing data and
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handling queries
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- `mongos` - The sharding router, which is needed if data will be distributed
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across multiple machines
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- `mongo` - The database shell (using JavaScript) through which we can configure
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our database
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Usually we start the `mongod` process and then use a separate terminal with
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`mongo` to access and modify our collections.
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### JSON & BSON
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While queries in MongoDB are made using a JSON-like\* format, MongoDB stores its
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documents internally in the Binary JSON (BSON format). BSON is not human
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readable like JSON as it's a binary encoding. However, this allows for end users
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to have access to more types than regular JSON, such as an integer or float
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type. Many other types, such as regular expressions, dates, or raw binary are
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supported too.
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[Here](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/bson-types/) is the full list
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of all types that are supported.
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- We refer JSON-like to mean JSON but with these extended types. For example,
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you can make queries directly with a regular expression or timestamp in
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MongoDB and you can receive data that has those types too.
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```js
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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/////////////////// Getting Started /////////////////////
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Start up the mongo database server
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// NOTE - You will need to do this in a separate terminal as the process will
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// take over the terminal. You may want to use the --fork option
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mongod // --fork
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// Connecting to a remote Mongo server
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// mongo "mongodb+srv://host.ip.address/admin" --username your-username
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// Mongoshell has a proper JavaScript interpreter built in
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3 + 2 // 5
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// Show available databases
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// MongoDB comes with the following databases built-in: admin, config, local
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show dbs
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// Switch to a new database (pre-existing or about to exist)
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// NOTE: There is no "create" command for a database in MongoDB.
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// The database is created upon data being inserted into a collection
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use employees
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// Create a new collection
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// NOTE: Inserting a document will implicitly create a collection anyways,
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// so this is not required
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db.createCollection('engineers')
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db.createCollection('doctors')
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// See what collections exist under employees
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show collections
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Basic Create/Read/Update/Delete (CRUD) Operations: ///
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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/////////////// Insert (Create) /////////////////////////
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// Insert one employee into the database
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// Each insertion returns acknowledged true or false
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// Every document has a unique _id value assigned to it automatically
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db.engineers.insertOne({ name: "Jane Doe", age: 21, gender: 'Female' })
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// Insert a list of employees into the `engineers` collection
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// Can insert as an array of objects
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db.engineers.insert([
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{ name: "Foo Bar", age: 25, gender: 'Male' },
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{ name: "Baz Qux", age: 27, gender: 'Other' },
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])
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// MongoDB does not enforce a schema or structure for objects
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// Insert an empty object into the `engineers` collection
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db.engineers.insertOne({})
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// Fields are optional and do not have to match rest of documents
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db.engineers.insertOne({ name: "Your Name", gender: "Male" })
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// Types can vary and are preserved on insertion
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// This can require additional validation in some languages to prevent problems
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db.engineers.insert({ name: ['Foo', 'Bar'], age: 3.14, gender: true })
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// Objects or arrays can be nested inside a document
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db.engineers.insertOne({
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name: "Your Name",
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gender: "Female",
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skilledIn: [
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"MongoDB",
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"NoSQL",
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],
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"date-of-birth": {
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"date": 1993-07-20T09:44:18.674Z,
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"age": 26
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},
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})
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// We can override the _id field
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// Works fine
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db.engineers.insertOne({
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_id: 1,
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name: "An Engineer",
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age: 25,
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gender: "Female",
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})
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// Be careful, as _id must ALWAYS be unique for the collection otherwise
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// the insertion will fail
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// Fails with a WriteError indicating _id is a duplicate value
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db.engineers.insertOne({
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_id: 1,
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name: "Another Engineer",
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age: 25,
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gender: "Male",
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})
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// Works fine as this is a different collection
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db.doctors.insertOne({
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_id: 1,
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name: "Some Doctor",
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age: 26,
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gender: "Other",
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})
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/////////////////// Find (Read) ////////////////////////
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// Queries are in the form of db.collectionName.find(<filter>)
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// Where <filter> is an object
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// Show everything in our database so far, limited to a
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// maximum of 20 documents at a time
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// Press i to iterate this cursor to the next 20 documents
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db.engineers.find({})
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// We can pretty print the result of any find() query
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db.engineers.find({}).pretty()
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// MongoDB queries take in a JS object and search for documents with matching
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// key-value pairs
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// Returns the first document matching query
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// NOTE: Order of insertion is not preserved in the database, output can vary
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db.engineers.findOne({ name: 'Foo Bar' })
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// Returns all documents with the matching key-value properties as a cursor
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// (which can be converted to an array)
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db.engineers.find({ age: 25 })
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// Type matters when it comes to queries
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// Returns nothing as all ages above are integer type
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db.engineers.find({ age: '25' })
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// find() supports nested objects and arrays just like create()
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db.engineers.find({
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name: "Your Name",
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gender: "Female",
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skilledIn: [
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"MongoDB",
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"NoSQL",
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],
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"date-of-birth": {
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"date": 1993-07-20T09:44:18.674Z,
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"age": 26
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},
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})
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///////////////////////// Update ////////////////////////
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// Queries are in the form of db.collectionName.update(<filter>, <update>)
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// NOTE: <update> will always use the $set operator.
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// Several operators are covered later on in the tutorial.
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// We can update a single object
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db.engineers.updateOne({ name: 'Foo Bar' }, { $set: { name: 'John Doe', age: 100 }})
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// Or update many objects at the same time
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db.engineers.update({ age: 25 }, { $set: { age: 26 }})
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// We can use { upsert: true } if we would like it to insert if the document doesn't already exist,
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// or to update if it does
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// Returns matched, upserted, modified count
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db.engineers.update({ name: 'Foo Baz' },
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{ $set:
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{
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age: 26,
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gender: 'Other'
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}
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},
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{ upsert: true }
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)
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/////////////////////// Delete /////////////////////////
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// Queries are in the form of db.collectionName.delete(<filter>)
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// Delete first document matching query, always returns deletedCount
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db.engineers.deleteOne({ name: 'Foo Baz' })
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// Delete many documents at once
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db.engineers.deleteMany({ gender: 'Male' })
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// NOTE: There are two methods db.collection.removeOne(<filter>) and
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// db.collection.removeMany(<filter>) that also delete objects but have a
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// slightly different return value.
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// They are not included here as they have been deprecated in the NodeJS driver.
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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//////////////////// Operators //////////////////////////
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Operators in MongoDB have a $ prefix. For this tutorial, we are only looking
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// at comparison and logical operators, but there are many other types of
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// operators
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//////////////// Comparison Operators ///////////////////
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// Find all greater than or greater than equal to some condition
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $gt: 25 }})
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $gte: 25 }})
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// Find all less than or less than equal to some condition
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $lt: 25 }})
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $lte: 25 }})
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// Find all equal or not equal to
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// Note: the $eq operator is added implicitly in most queries
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $eq: 25 }})
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $ne: 25 }})
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// Find all that match any element in the array, or not in the array
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $in: [ 20, 23, 24, 25 ]}})
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db.engineers.find({ age: { $nin: [ 20, 23, 24, 25 ]}})
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//////////////// Logical Operators ///////////////////
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// Join two query clauses together
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// NOTE: MongoDB does this implicitly for most queries
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db.engineers.find({ $and: [
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gender: 'Female',
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age: {
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$gte: 18
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}
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]})
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// Match either query condition
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db.engineers.find({ $or: [
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gender: 'Female',
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age: {
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$gte: 18
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}
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]})
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// Negates the query
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db.engineers.find({ $not: {
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gender: 'Female'
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}})
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// Must match none of the query conditions
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db.engineers.find({ $nor [
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gender: 'Female',
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age: {
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$gte: 18
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}
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]})
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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//////////////// Database Operations: ///////////////////
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Delete (drop) the employees database
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// THIS WILL DELETE ALL DOCUMENTS IN THE DATABASE!
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db.dropDatabase()
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// Create a new database with some data
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use example
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db.test.insertOne({ name: "Testing data, please ignore!", type: "Test" })
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// Quit Mongo shell
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exit
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// Import/export database as BSON:
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// Mongodump to export data as BSON for all databases
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// Exported data is found in under "MongoDB Database Tools/bin/dump"
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// NOTE: If the command is not found, navigate to "MongoDB Database Tools/bin"
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// and use the executable from there mongodump
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// Mongorestore to restore data from BSON
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mongorestore dump
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// Import/export database as JSON:
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// Mongoexport to export data as JSON for all databases
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mongoexport --collection=example
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// Mongoimport to export data as JSON for all databases
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mongoimport --collection=example
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```
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## Further Reading
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### Setup Videos
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- [Install MongoDB - Windows 10](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85A6m1soKww)
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- [Install MongoDB - Mac](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DX15WbKidXY)
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- [Install MongoDB - Linux
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(Ubuntu)](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD_2pojFWoE)
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### Input Validation
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From the examples above, if input validation or structure is a concern, I would
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take a look at the following ORMs:
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- [Mongoose (Node.js)](https://mongoosejs.com/docs/) - Input validation through
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schemas that support types, required values, minimum and maximum values.
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- [MongoEngine (Python)](http://mongoengine.org/) - Similar to Mongoose, but I
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found it somewhat limited in my experience
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- [MongoKit (Python)](https://github.com/namlook/mongokit) - Another great
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alternative to MongoEngine that I find easier to use than MongoEngine
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For statically strongly typed languages (e.g. Java, C++, Rust), input validation
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usually doesn't require a library as they define types and structure at compile
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time.
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### Resources
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If you have the time to spare, I would strongly recommend the courses on
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[MongoDB University](https://university.mongodb.com/). They're by MongoDB
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themselves and go into much more detail while still being concise. They're a mix
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of videos and quiz questions and this was how I gained my knowledge of MongoDB.
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I would recommend the following video series for learning MongoDB:
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- [MongoDB Crash Course - Traversy
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Media](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-56x56UppqQ)
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- [MongoDB Tutorial for Beginners -
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Amigoscode](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Www6cTUymCY)
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Language-specific ones that I used before:
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- [Build A REST API With Node.js, Express, & MongoDB - Web Dev
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Simplified](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgTGADljAeg)
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- [MongoDB with Python Crash Course - Tutorial for Beginners -
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FreeCodeCamp](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-1xI85Zog8)
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- [How to Use MongoDB with Java - Random
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Coder](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reYPUvu2Giw)
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- [An Introduction to Using MongoDB with Rust -
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MongoDB](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFlftfLGwPM)
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Most of the information above was cross-referenced with the [MongoDB
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docs](https://www.mongodb.com/). Here are the docs for each section:
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- [MongoDB Types](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/bson-types/) - List
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of all types that MongoDB supports natively
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- [MongoDB Operators](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/operator/) -
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List of operators MongoDB supports natively
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- [MongoDB CRUD](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/command/nav-crud/) -
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Commands for create, read, update, delete
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If you've been enjoying MongoDB so far and want to explore intermediate
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features, I would look at
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[aggregation](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/command/nav-aggregation/),
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[indexing](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/indexes/), and
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[sharding](https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/sharding/).
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- Aggregation - useful for creating advanced queries to be executed by the
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database
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- Indexing allows for caching, which allows for much faster execution of queries
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- Sharding allows for horizontal data scaling and distribution between multiple
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machines.
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