$ln (aggregation)
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Definition
$ln
Calculates the natural logarithm ln (i.e log e) of a number and returns the result as a double.
$ln
has the following syntax:{ $ln: <number> } The
<number>
expression can be any valid expression as long as it resolves to a non-negative number. For more information on expressions, see Expression Operators.$ln
is equivalent to$log: [ <number>, Math.E ]
expression, whereMath.E
is a JavaScript representation for Euler's number e.
Behavior
The default return type is a double
. If at least
one operand is a decimal
, then the return
type is a decimal.
If the argument resolves to a value of null
or refers to a field that is
missing, $ln
returns null
. If the argument resolves to
NaN
, $ln
returns NaN
.
Example | Results |
---|---|
{ $ln: 1 } | 0 |
{ $ln: Math.E } where Math.E is a JavaScript representation for e. | 1 |
{ $ln: 10 } | 2.302585092994046 |
Example
A collection sales
contains the following documents:
{ _id: 1, year: "2000", sales: 8700000 } { _id: 2, year: "2005", sales: 5000000 } { _id: 3, year: "2010", sales: 6250000 }
The following example transforms the sales
data:
db.sales.aggregate( [ { $project: { x: "$year", y: { $ln: "$sales" } } } ] )
The operation returns the following results:
{ "_id" : 1, "x" : "2000", "y" : 15.978833583624812 } { "_id" : 2, "x" : "2005", "y" : 15.424948470398375 } { "_id" : 3, "x" : "2010", "y" : 15.648092021712584 }