Collations
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Overview
New in version 3.4.
Collations are sets of rules for how to compare strings, typically in a particular natural language.
For example, in Canadian French, the last accent in a given word determines the sorting order.
Consider the following French words:
cote < coté < côte < côté
The sort order using the Canadian French collation would result in the following:
cote < côte < coté < côté
If collation is unspecified, MongoDB uses the simple binary comparison for strings. As such, the sort order of the words would be:
cote < coté < côte < côté
Usage
You can specify a default collation for collections and indexes when they are created, or specify a collation for CRUD operations and aggregations. For operations that support collation, MongoDB uses the collection's default collation unless the operation specifies a different collation.
Collation Parameters
'collation' => { 'locale' => <string>, 'caseLevel' => <bool>, 'caseFirst' => <string>, 'strength' => <int>, 'numericOrdering' => <bool>, 'alternate' => <string>, 'maxVariable' => <string>, 'normalization' => <bool>, 'backwards' => <bool> }
The only required parameter is locale
, which the server parses as
an ICU format locale ID.
For example, set locale
to en_US
to represent US English
or fr_CA
to represent Canadian French.
For a complete description of the available parameters, see the MongoDB manual entry.
Assign a Default Collation to a Collection
The following example creates a new collection
called contacts
on the test
database and assigns a default
collation with the fr_CA
locale. Specifying a collation when you
create the collection ensures that all operations involving a query
that are run against the
contacts
collection use the fr_CA
collation, unless the query
specifies another collation. Any indexes on the new collection also
inherit the default collation, unless the creation command specifies
another collation.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") client[:contacts, { "collation" => { "locale" => "fr_CA" } } ].create
Assign a Collation to an Index
To specify a collation for an index, use the collation
option when you create the index.
The following example creates an index on the name
field of the address_book
collection, with the unique
parameter
enabled and a default collation with locale
set to en_US
.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") client[:address_book].indexes.create_one( { "first_name" => 1 }, "unique" => true, "collation" => { "locale" => "en_US" } )
To use this index, make sure your queries also specify the same collation. The following query uses the above index:
client[:address_book].find({"first_name" : "Adam" }, "collation" => { "locale" => "en_US" })
The following queries do NOT use the index. The first query uses no
collation, and the second uses a collation with a different strength
value than the collation on the index.
client[:address_book].find({"first_name" : "Adam" }) client[:address_book].find({"first_name" : "Adam" }, "collation" => { "locale" => "en_US", "strength" => 2 })
Operations that Support Collation
All reading, updating, and deleting methods support collation. Some examples are listed below.
find()
and sort()
Individual queries can specify a collation to use when matching
and sorting results. The following query and sort operation uses
a German collation with the locale
parameter set to de
.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") docs = client[:contacts].find({ "city" => "New York" }, { "collation" => { "locale" => "de" } }).sort( "name" => 1 )
find_one_and_update()
A collection called names
contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : 1, "first_name" : "Hans" } { "_id" : 2, "first_name" : "Gunter" } { "_id" : 3, "first_name" : "Günter" } { "_id" : 4, "first_name" : "Jürgen" }
The following find_one_and_update
operation on the collection
does not specify a collation.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") doc = client[:names].find_one_and_update( {"first_name" => { "$lt" => "Gunter" }}, { "$set" => { "verified" => true } })
Because Gunter
is lexically first in the collection,
the above operation returns no results and updates no documents.
Consider the same find_one_and_update
operation but with the
collation specified. The locale is set to de@collation=phonebook
.
Note
Some locales have a collation=phonebook
option available for
use with languages which sort proper nouns differently from other
words. According to the de@collation=phonebook
collation,
characters with umlauts come before the same characters without
umlauts.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") doc = client[:names].find_one_and_update( { "first_name" => { "$lt" => "Gunter" } }, { "$set" => { "verified" => true } }, { "collation" => { "locale" => "de@collation=phonebook" }, :return_document => :after } )
The operation returns the following updated document:
{ "_id" => 3, "first_name" => "Günter", "verified" => true }
find_one_and_delete()
Set the numericOrdering
collation parameter to true
to compare numeric string by their numeric values.
The collection numbers
contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : 1, "a" : "16" } { "_id" : 2, "a" : "84" } { "_id" : 3, "a" : "179" }
The following example matches the first document in which field a
has a numeric value greater than 100 and deletes it.
docs = numbers.find_one_and_delete({ "a" => { "$gt" => "100" } }, { "collation" => { "locale" => "en", "numericOrdering" => true } })
After the above operation, the following documents remain in the collection:
{ "_id" : 1, "a" : "16" } { "_id" : 2, "a" : "84" }
If you perform the same operation without collation, the server deletes
the first document it finds in which the lexical value of a
is
greater than "100"
.
numbers = client[:numbers] docs = numbers.find_one_and_delete({ "a" => { "$gt" => "100" } })
After the above operation the document in which a
was equal to
"16"
has been deleted, and the following documents remain in the
collection:
{ "_id" : 2, "a" : "84" } { "_id" : 3, "a" : "179" }
delete_many()
You can use collations with all the various bulk operations which exist in the Ruby driver.
The collection recipes
contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : 1, "dish" : "veggie empanadas", "cuisine" : "Spanish" } { "_id" : 2, "dish" : "beef bourgignon", "cuisine" : "French" } { "_id" : 3, "dish" : "chicken molé", "cuisine" : "Mexican" } { "_id" : 4, "dish" : "chicken paillard", "cuisine" : "french" } { "_id" : 5, "dish" : "pozole verde", "cuisine" : "Mexican" }
Setting the strength
parameter of the collation document to 1
or 2
causes the server to disregard case in the query filter. The
following example uses a case-insensitive query filter
to delete all records in which the cuisine
field matches
French
.
client = Mongo::Client.new([ "127.0.0.1:27017" ], :database => "test") recipes = client[:recipes] docs = recipes.delete_many({ "cuisine" => "French" }, "collation" => { "locale" => "en_US", "strength" => 1 })
After the above operation runs, the documents with _id
values of
2
and 4
are deleted from the collection.
Aggregation
To use collation with an aggregation operation, specify a collation in the aggregation options.
The following aggregation example uses a collection called names
and groups the first_name
field together, counts the total
number of results in each group, and sorts the
results by German phonebook order.
aggregation = names.aggregate( [ { "$group" => { "_id" => "$first_name", "name_count" => { "$sum" => 1 } } }, { "$sort" => { "_id" => 1 } }, ], { "collation" => { "locale" => "de@collation=phonebook" } } ) aggregation.each do |doc| #=> Yields a BSON::Document. end