I\'m new to mongodb and am trying to query child objects. I have a collection of States, and each State has child Cities. One of the Cities has a Name property that is null,
If it is exactly null
(as opposed to not set):
db.states.find({"cities.name": null})
(but as javierfp points out, it also matches documents that have no cities array at all, I'm assuming that they do).
If it's the case that the property is not set:
db.states.find({"cities.name": {"$exists": false}})
I've tested the above with a collection created with these two inserts:
db.states.insert({"cities": [{name: "New York"}, {name: null}]})
db.states.insert({"cities": [{name: "Austin"}, {color: "blue"}]})
The first query finds the first state, the second query finds the second. If you want to find them both with one query you can make an $or
query:
db.states.find({"$or": [
{"cities.name": null},
{"cities.name": {"$exists": false}}
]})
Assuming your "states" collection is like:
{"name" : "Spain", "cities" : [ { "name" : "Madrid" }, { "name" : null } ] }
{"name" : "France" }
The query to find states with null cities would be:
db.states.find({"cities.name" : {"$eq" : null, "$exists" : true}});
It is a common mistake to query for nulls as:
db.states.find({"cities.name" : null});
because this query will return all documents lacking the key (in our example it will return Spain and France). So, unless you are sure the key is always present you must check that the key exists as in the first query.