6

So I have this document in my database like below

{
  "_id": {
    "$oid": "59a8668f900bea0528b63fdc"
  },
  "userId": "KingSlizzard",
  "credits": 15,
  "settings": {
    "music": 1,
    "sfx": 0
  }
}

I have this method for updating just specific fields in a document

function setPlayerDataField(targetUserId, updateObject) {
    playerDataCollection.update({
            "userId": targetUserId //Looks for a doc with the userId of the player
        }, { $set: updateObject }, //Uses the $set Mongo modifier to set value at a path
        false, //Create the document if it does not exist (upsert)
        true //This query will only affect a single object (multi)
    );
}

It works fine if I do a command like

setPlayerDataField("KingSlizzard",{"credits": 20});

It would result in the document like this

{
  "_id": {
    "$oid": "59a8668f900bea0528b63fdc"
  },
  "userId": "KingSlizzard",
  "credits": 20,
  "settings": {
    "music": 1,
    "sfx": 0
  }
}

The value for credits is now 20 yay! This is desired.

However, if I do this command...

setPlayerDataField("KingSlizzard",{"settings": {"music":0}});

It would result in the document like this

{
      "_id": {
        "$oid": "59a8668f900bea0528b63fdc"
      },
      "userId": "KingSlizzard",
      "credits": 20,
      "settings": {
        "music": 0
      }
    }

All I wanted to do was set only the settings/music value to 0. This result is NOT desired since we lost the sfx value.

So my question is, how do I update a value in a sub object without replacing the whole sub object itself?

0

1 Answer 1

3

To set a specific property of a child document, use dot notation. In your example, write it as:

setPlayerDataField("KingSlizzard", {"settings.music": 0});

See the example in the MongoDB docs.

To specify a <field> in an embedded document or in an array, use dot notation.

1
  • Thank you! For future reference, dot notation also works when executing bulk queries with bulkWrite Nov 17, 2023 at 18:20

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