$trunc (aggregation)
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Definition
$trunc
Changed in version 4.2..
$trunc
truncates a number to a whole integer or to a specified decimal place.MongoDB 4.2 adds the following syntax for
$trunc
:{ $trunc : [ <number>, <place> ] } FieldTypeDescription<number>
numberCan be any valid expression that resolves to a number. Specifically, the expression must resolve to an integer, double,
decimal
, orlong
.$trunc
returns an error if the expression resolves to a non-numeric data type.<place>
integerOptional Can be any valid expression that resolves to an integer between -20 and 100, exclusive. e.g.
-20 < place < 100
. Defaults to 0 if unspecified.If
<place>
resolves to a positive integer,$trunc
truncates to<place>
decimal places.For example,
$trunc : [1234.5678, 2]
truncates to two decimal places and returns1234.56
.If
<place>
resolves to a negative integer,$trunc
replaces<place>
digits left of the decimal with0
.For example,
$trunc : [1234.5678, -2]
replaces to two digits left of the decimal with0
and returns1200
.If the absolute value of
<place>
exceeds the number of digits to the left of the decimal,$trunc
returns0
.For example,
$trunc : [ 1234.5678, -5]
specifies the fifth digit left of the decimal. This exceeds the number of digits left of the decimal and returns0
.If
<place>
resolves to0
,$trunc
truncates all digits to the right of the decimal and returns the whole integer value.For example,
$trunc : [1234.5678, 0]
returns1234
Prior to MongoDB 4.2,
$trunc
truncated the input value to the whole integer. MongoDB 4.2 continues supporting the pre-4.2 syntax and behavior:{ $trunc: <number> } The
<number>
expression can be any valid expression as long as it resolves to a number. For more information on expressions, see Expressions.
Behavior
$trunc
does not round the truncated data. To round
input values to a specified place, use the
$round
expression.
Returned Data Type
If truncating to a specific decimal place, the data type returned by
$trunc
matches the data type of the input expression or
value.
If truncating to a whole integer value, $trunc
returns
an integer.
null
, NaN
, and +/- Infinity
If the argument resolves to a value of
null
or refers to a field that is missing,$trunc
returnsnull
.If the argument resolves to
NaN
,$trunc
returnsNaN
.If the argument resolves to negative or positive infinity,
$trunc
returns negative or positive infinity respectively.
Example | Results |
---|---|
{ $trunc: [ NaN, 1] } | NaN |
{ $trunc: [ null, 1] } | null |
{ $trunc : [ Infinity, 1 ] } | Infinity |
{ $trunc : [ -Infinity, 1 ] } | -Infinity |
Example
Create a collection named samples
with the following documents:
db.samples.insertMany( [ { _id: 1, value: 19.25 }, { _id: 2, value: 28.73 }, { _id: 3, value: 34.32 }, { _id: 4, value: -45.34 } ] )
The following aggregation returns
value
truncated to the first decimal place:db.samples.aggregate([ { $project: { truncatedValue: { $trunc: [ "$value", 1 ] } } } ]) The operation returns the following results:
{ "_id" : 1, "truncatedValue" : 19.2 } { "_id" : 2, "truncatedValue" : 28.7 } { "_id" : 3, "truncatedValue" : 34.3 } { "_id" : 4, "truncatedValue" : -45.3 } The following aggregation returns
value
truncated to the first place:db.samples.aggregate([ { $project: { truncatedValue: { $trunc: [ "$value", -1 ] } } } ]) The operation returns the following results:
{ "_id" : 1, "truncatedValue" : 10 } { "_id" : 2, "truncatedValue" : 20 } { "_id" : 3, "truncatedValue" : 30 } { "_id" : 4, "truncatedValue" : -40 } The following aggregation returns``value`` truncated to the whole integer:
db.samples.aggregate([ { $project: { truncatedValue: { $trunc: [ "$value", 0 ] } } } ]) The operation returns the following results:
{ "_id" : 1, "truncatedValue" : 19 } { "_id" : 2, "truncatedValue" : 28 } { "_id" : 3, "truncatedValue" : 34 } { "_id" : 4, "truncatedValue" : -45 }