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Specify Which Fields to Return
Overview
Use a projection to control which fields appear in the documents returned by read operations. Many requests only require certain fields, so projections can help you limit unnecessary network bandwidth usage. Projections work in two ways:
Explicitly include fields with a value of
1
. This has the side-effect of implicitly excluding all unspecified fields.Implicitly exclude fields with a value of
0
. This has the side-effect of implicitly including all unspecified fields.
These two methods of projection are mutually exclusive: if you explicitly include fields, you cannot explicitly exclude fields, and vice versa.
Sample Documents
Consider the following collection containing documents that describe varieties of fruit:
[ { "_id": 1, "name": "apples", "qty": 5, "rating": 3 }, { "_id": 2, "name": "bananas", "qty": 7, "rating": 1 }, { "_id": 3, "name": "oranges", "qty": 6, "rating": 2 }, { "_id": 4, "name": "avocados", "qty": 3, "rating": 5 }, ]
Note
Your query operation may return a reference to a cursor that contains matching documents. To learn how to examine data stored in the cursor, see the Cursor Fundamentals page.
Single Field
In the following query, pass the projection to only return the name
field of each document:
// return only* the name field const projection = { name: 1 }; const cursor = collection.find().project(projection); await cursor.forEach(console.dir);
The projection document specifies a value of 1
for name
to
indicate that the read operation result should include the name
field of each returned document. As a result, this projection implicitly
excludes the qty
and rating
fields. Passing this projection to
find()
with an empty query document and no sort document yields
the following results:
{ "_id": 1, "name": "apples" } { "_id": 2, "name": "bananas" } { "_id": 3, "name": "oranges" } { "_id": 4, "name": "avocados" }
Despite the fact that this projection only explicitly included the
name
field, the query returned the _id
field as well!
This happens because the _id
field is a special case: it is always
included in every query unless explicitly specified otherwise. That's
because _id
is a unique identifier for each document, a property
that can be very useful when constructing queries. The movies
collection is a good example of why this property is useful: because
remakes and even separate works can sometimes reuse movie titles, you
need a unique _id
value to refer to any specific movie. _id
is
the only exception to the mutually exclusive include-exclude behavior in
projections: you can explicitly exclude _id
even when explicitly
including other fields if you do not want _id
to be present in
returned documents.
// return only the name field const projection = { _id: 0, name: 1 }; const cursor = collection.find().project(projection); await cursor.forEach(console.dir);
The projection document specifies a value of 1
for name
to
indicate that the read operation result should include the name
field of each returned document. As a result, this projection implicitly
excludes the qty
and rating
fields. Passing this projection to
find()
with an empty query document and no sort document yields
the following results:
{ "name": "apples" } { "name": "bananas" } { "name": "oranges" } { "name": "avocados" }
Multiple Fields
You can also specify multiple fields to include in your projection. Note: the order in which you specify the fields in the projection does not alter the order in which they are returned.
const projection = { _id: 0, rating: 1, name: 1 }; const cursor = collection.find().project(projection); await cursor.forEach(console.dir);
This example that identifies two fields to include in the projection yields the following results:
{ "name": "apples", "rating": 3 } { "name": "bananas", "rating": 1 } { "name": "oranges", "rating": 2 } { "name": "avocados", "rating": 5 }
For additional projection examples, see the MongoDB Manual page on Project Fields to Return from Query.