$dateDiff (aggregation)
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Definition
$dateDiff
New in version 5.0.
Returns the difference between two dates.
The
$dateDiff
expression has this syntax:{ $dateDiff: { startDate: <Expression>, endDate: <Expression>, unit: <Expression>, timezone: <tzExpression>, startOfWeek: <String> } } Subtracts
startDate
fromendDate
. Returns an integer in the specifiedunit
.FieldRequired/OptionalDescriptionstartDate
Required
The start of the time period. The
startDate
can be any expression that resolves to a Date, a Timestamp, or an ObjectID.endDate
Required
The end of the time period. The
endDate
can be any expression that resolves to a Date, a Timestamp, or an ObjectID.unit
Required
The time measurement
unit
between thestartDate
andendDate
. It is an expression that resolves to a string:year
quarter
week
month
day
hour
minute
second
millisecond
timezone
Optional
The timezone to carry out the operation.
<tzExpression>
must be a valid expression that resolves to a string formatted as either an Olson Timezone Identifier or a UTC Offset. If notimezone
is provided, the result is displayed inUTC
.FormatExamplesOlson Timezone Identifier
"America/New_York" "Europe/London" "GMT" UTC Offset
+/-[hh]:[mm], e.g. "+04:45" +/-[hh][mm], e.g. "-0530" +/-[hh], e.g. "+03" startOfWeek
Optional
Used when the unit is equal to
week
. Defaults toSunday
. ThestartOfWeek
parameter is an expression that resolves to a case insensitive string:monday
(ormon
)tuesday
(ortue
)wednesday
(orwed
)thursday
(orthu
)friday
(orfri
)saturday
(orsat
)sunday
(orsun
)
Behavior
No Fractional Units
The $dateDiff
expression returns the integer difference between the
startDate
and endDate
measured in the specified units
.
Durations are measured by counting the number of times a unit boundary
is passed. For example, two dates that are 18 months apart would
return 1 year
difference instead of 1.5 years
.
Start Of Week
The start of the week
is Sunday
unless modified by the
startOfWeek
parameter. Any week that begins between the
startDate
and endDate
on the specified day will be counted. The
week count is not bounded by calendar month
or calendar year
.
Time Zone
When using an Olson Timezone Identifier in the <timezone>
field, MongoDB applies the DST offset
if applicable for the specified timezone.
For example, consider a sales
collection with the following document:
{ "_id" : 1, "item" : "abc", "price" : 20, "quantity" : 5, "date" : ISODate("2017-05-20T10:24:51.303Z") }
The following aggregation illustrates how MongoDB handles the DST
offset for the Olson Timezone Identifier. The example uses the
$hour
and $minute
operators to return the
corresponding portions of the date
field:
db.sales.aggregate([ { $project: { "nycHour": { $hour: { date: "$date", timezone: "-05:00" } }, "nycMinute": { $minute: { date: "$date", timezone: "-05:00" } }, "gmtHour": { $hour: { date: "$date", timezone: "GMT" } }, "gmtMinute": { $minute: { date: "$date", timezone: "GMT" } }, "nycOlsonHour": { $hour: { date: "$date", timezone: "America/New_York" } }, "nycOlsonMinute": { $minute: { date: "$date", timezone: "America/New_York" } } } }])
The operation returns the following result:
{ "_id": 1, "nycHour" : 5, "nycMinute" : 24, "gmtHour" : 10, "gmtMinute" : 24, "nycOlsonHour" : 6, "nycOlsonMinute" : 24 }
Additional Details
The algorithm calculates the date difference using the Gregorian calendar.
Leap years and daylight savings time are accounted for but not leap seconds.
The difference returned can be negative.
Examples
Elapsed Time
Create a collection of customer orders:
db.orders.insertMany( [ { custId: 456, purchased: ISODate("2020-12-31"), delivered: ISODate("2021-01-05") }, { custId: 457, purchased: ISODate("2021-02-28"), delivered: ISODate("2021-03-07") }, { custId: 458, purchased: ISODate("2021-02-16"), delivered: ISODate("2021-02-18") } ] )
The following example:
Returns the average number of days for a delivery.
Uses
dateDiff
to calculate the difference between thepurchased
date and thedelivered
date.
db.orders.aggregate( [ { $group: { _id: null, averageTime: { $avg: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$purchased", endDate: "$delivered", unit: "day" } } } } }, { $project: { _id: 0, numDays: { $trunc: [ "$averageTime", 1 ] } } } ] )
The $avg
accumulator in the $group
stage uses
$dateDiff
on each document to get the time between the
purchased
and delivered
dates. The resulting value is returned
as averageTime
.
The decimal portion of the averageTime
is truncated
($trunc
) in the $project
stage to produce
output like this:
{ "numDays" : 4.6 }
Result Precision
Create this collection with starting and ending dates for a subscription.
db.subscriptions.insertMany( [ { custId: 456, start: ISODate("2010-01-01"), end: ISODate("2011-01-01") }, { custId: 457, start: ISODate("2010-01-01"), end: ISODate("2011-06-31") }, { custId: 458, start: ISODate("2010-03-01"), end: ISODate("2010-04-30") } ] )
The $dateDiff
expression returns a time difference expressed in
integer units
. There are no fractional parts of a unit. For
example, when counting in years
there are no half years.
In this example, note how changing the unit
changes the returned
precision:
db.subscriptions.aggregate( [ { $project: { Start: "$start", End: "$end", years: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "year" } }, months: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "month" } }, days: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "day" } }, _id: 0 } } ] )
The results are summarized in this table:
Start | End | Years | Months | Days |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010-01-01 | 2011-01-01 | 1 | 12 | 365 |
2010-01-01 | 2011-07-01 | 1 | 18 | 546 |
2010-03-01 | 2010-04-30 | 0 | 1 | 60 |
The count only increments when a new unit
starts, so 18 months are
reported as 1 year in the second row and 60 days are reported as one
month in the third row.
Weeks Per Month
Create a collection of months:
db.months.insertMany( [ { month: "January", start: ISODate("2021-01-01"), end: ISODate("2021-01-31") }, { month: "February", start: ISODate("2021-02-01"), end: ISODate("2021-02-28") }, { month: "March", start: ISODate("2021-03-01"), end: ISODate("2021-03-31") }, ] )
You can change the start of each week, and count the resulting number of weeks in each month with the following code:
db.months.aggregate( [ { $project: { wks_default: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "week" } }, wks_monday: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "week", startOfWeek: "Monday" } }, wks_friday: { $dateDiff: { startDate: "$start", endDate: "$end", unit: "week", startOfWeek: "fri" } }, _id: 0 } } ] )
The results are summarized in this table:
Month | Sunday | Monday | Friday |
---|---|---|---|
January | 5 | 4 | 4 |
February | 4 | 3 | 4 |
March | 4 | 4 | 4 |
From the results:
When the
startOfWeek
is Sunday, the 5thweek
in January, 2021 begins on the 31st.Because the 31st is a Sunday and it is between
startDate
andendDate
, oneweek
is added to the count.The
week
count is incremented even when a calendar week finishes afterendDate
or in the next calendar period.