Book Image

MongoDB Fundamentals

By : Amit Phaltankar, Juned Ahsan, Michael Harrison, Liviu Nedov
Book Image

MongoDB Fundamentals

By: Amit Phaltankar, Juned Ahsan, Michael Harrison, Liviu Nedov

Overview of this book

MongoDB is one of the most popular database technologies for handling large collections of data. This book will help MongoDB beginners develop the knowledge and skills to create databases and process data efficiently. Unlike other MongoDB books, MongoDB Fundamentals dives into cloud computing from the very start – showing you how to get started with Atlas in the first chapter. You will discover how to modify existing data, add new data into a database, and handle complex queries by creating aggregation pipelines. As you progress, you'll learn about the MongoDB replication architecture and configure a simple cluster. You will also get to grips with user authentication, as well as techniques for backing up and restoring data. Finally, you'll perform data visualization using MongoDB Charts. You will work on realistic projects that are presented as bitesize exercises and activities, allowing you to challenge yourself in an enjoyable and attainable way. Many of these mini-projects are based around a movie database case study, while the last chapter acts as a final project where you will use MongoDB to solve a real-world problem based on a bike-sharing app. By the end of this book, you'll have the skills and confidence to process large volumes of data and tackle your own projects using MongoDB.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Preface

Update Operators

In order to facilitate different types of update commands, MongoDB provides various update operators or update modifiers such as set, multiply, increment, and more. In the previous sections, we used the operator $set, which is one of the update operators provided by MongoDB. In this section, we will learn some of the most commonly used operators and examples. Before we go through the operators, we will discuss their syntax. The following code snippet shows the basic syntax of an update expression that uses an update operator:

{
  <update operator>: {<field1> : <value1>, ... }
}

As per the preceding syntax, an operator can be assigned a document containing one or more pairs of field and value. The operator is then applied to each field using the respective value. An update expression like the previous one is useful when all the given fields need to be updated with the same operator. You may also want to update different fields of a...