11

I have a timestamp field in my each document. the timestamp is in ISODate format. Is there any way i can sort the data using it in Document Explorer or Query Explorer?

3 Answers 3

17

Each document has a default timestamp field named '_ts'. You can for instance get last documents with the following query:

SELECT * FROM c ORDER BY c._ts DESC

2
  • 1
    will it work with my own timestamp and not the document's build-in _ts field? Jul 4, 2018 at 10:31
  • Are you sure? because I'll be storing the timestamp as a string in ISODate format. This is because their sdk didn't let me use the js Date object directly when I posted this question Jul 5, 2018 at 6:18
1

If you have a full precision (-1) index on your ISO date string field ORDER BY works as expected.

2
  • uhh sorry i didnt get what you said. can you elaborate it? May 27, 2016 at 10:56
  • 1
    You have to specify an indexing policy the uses all of the data in value. Without it, DocumentDB will only use the first 3 bytes. You want to specify a range index. May 27, 2016 at 21:15
0

Store the date as an epoch, not ISO date. If you need a humanly readable date in the document, you can store both.

See this one https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/working-with-dates-in-azure-documentdb-4/

- As per comment, and Larry's answer, you can use Range indexing with precision -1 (a requirement for range indexing). You can set your index requirements from the portal as json or by code.

new IncludedPath { 
    Path = "/your_iso_property_path" ,
    Indexes = new Collection<Index> {
        new RangeIndex(DataType.String) { Precision = -1 } 
    }
});

For further details, see https://azure.microsoft.com/nb-no/documentation/articles/documentdb-indexing-policies/

If you created the collection using the API or some time ago using the portal the default indexing for strings will be hash indexing.

1
  • 1
    That's an option and it is more space efficient but I have found using ISO date strings to be as performant. It is human readable and I don't have to add a demoralization ("store both") like you suggest. May 27, 2016 at 9:27

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