28

I have document structure like :

{
    map: 'A',
    points: [
        {
            type: 'type1',
            distanceToSpawn: 110
        },
        {
            type: 'type4',
            distanceToSpawn: 40
        },
        {
           type: 'type6',
           distanceToSpawn: 30
        }
    ]
},
{
    map: 'B',
    points: [
        {
            type: 'type1',
            distanceToSpawn: 100
        },
        {
            type: 'type2',
            distanceToSpawn: 60
        },
        {
            type: 'type3',
            distanceToSpawn: 25
        }
    ]
},
{
    map: 'C',
    points: [
        {
            type: 'type2',
            distanceToSpawn: 90
        },
        {
            type: 'type3',
            distanceToSpawn: 1
        },
        {
            type: 'type6',
            distanceToSpawn: 76
        }
    ]
}

I want to get all maps having point type type1 sorted by the distanceToSpawn in ascending order.

Expected result :

{
    map: 'B',
    points: [
        {
            type: 'type1',
            distanceToSpawn: 100
        }
    ]
},
{
    map: 'A',
    points: [
        {
            type: 'type1',
            distanceToSpawn: 110
        }
    ]
}

I've tried something like :

db.maps.find({'points.type': {$eq : 'type1'}}, {map: 1, 'points.$':1}).sort({'points.distanceToSpawn': 1}).limit(10)

But this thing not sorting maps by ascending order.

Thanks.

1 Answer 1

29

You cannot do that with arrays, and the main problem here is because you want the "sort" to happen on the matched element. If you want to sort results like this then you need to use .aggregate() instead. Either as:

For modern MongoDB versions:

db.maps.aggregate([
    { "$match": { "points.type": "type1" }},
    { "$addFields": {
        "order": {
            "$filter": {
              "input": "$points",
              "as": "p",
              "cond": { "$eq": [ "$$p.type", "type1" ] }
            }
        }
    }},
    { "$sort": { "order": 1 } }
])

For MongoDB 2.6 to 3.0

db.maps.aggregate([
   { $match: { 'points.type': 'type1' } },
    {
     $project: {
       points: {
        $setDifference: [
          {
            $map: {
              input: '$points',
              as: 'p',
              in: {
                $cond: [
                  { $eq: ['$$p.type', 'type1'] },
                  '$$p',
                  false,
                ]
              }
            }
          },
          [false]
        ]
      }
    }
  },
  { $sort: { 'points.distanceToSpawn': 1 } },
]);

Or less efficiently in versions prior to MongoDB 2.6:

db.maps.aggregate([
    { "$match": { "points.type": "type1" }},
    { "$unwind": "$points" },
    { "$match": { "points.type": "type1" }},
    { "$group": {
        "_id": "$_id",
        "points": { "$push": "$points" }
    }},
    { "$sort": { "points.ditanceToSpawn": 1 } }         
])

That's the only way to match the correct elements and have them considered in a "sort" operation. The default cursor sort will just otherwise consider the values for the field in the array elements that do not match your selected "type" instead.

3
  • Keep in mind that when using $unwind operator before the $sort operator it cannot take advantages of an index. (I had the same issues trying to sort by array filds using always the first item of the array for comparism.)
    – phwa4563
    Sep 26, 2018 at 13:13
  • 9
    For the "modern MongoDB versions" example, should the sort be on order.distanceToSpawn instead of just order? Or if not, why? Oct 15, 2018 at 11:03
  • 2
    What index would you create for this sorting ?
    – jadus
    Feb 27, 2020 at 16:41

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