- Reference >
- Operators >
- Aggregation Pipeline Operators >
- $range (aggregation)
$range (aggregation)¶
On this page
Definition¶
-
$range
¶ Returns an array whose elements are a generated sequence of numbers.
$range
generates the sequence from the specified starting number by successively incrementing the starting number by the specified step value up to but not including the end point.$range
has the following operator expression syntax:Operand Description <start>
An integer that specifies the start of the sequence. Can be any valid expression that resolves to an integer. <end>
An integer that specifies the exclusive upper limit of the sequence. Can be any valid expression that resolves to an integer. <non-zero step>
Optional. An integer that specifies the increment value. Can be any valid expression that resolves to a non-zero integer. Defaults to 1.
Behavior¶
The <start>
and <end>
arguments are required and must be
integers. The <non-zero step>
argument is optional, and defaults
to 1
if omitted.
Example | Results |
---|---|
{ $range: [ 0, 10, 2 ] } |
[ 0, 2, 4, 6, 8 ] |
{ $range: [ 10, 0, -2 ] } |
[ 10, 8, 6, 4, 2 ] |
{ $range: [ 0, 10, -2 ] } |
[ ] |
{ $range: [ 0, 5 ] } |
[ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 ] |
Example¶
The following example uses a collection called distances
that lists cities along with their distance in miles from San
Francisco.
Documents in the distances
collection:
A bicyclist is planning to ride from San
Francisco to each city listed in the
collection and wants to stop and rest every 25 miles.
The following aggregation pipeline
operation uses the $range
operator to determine
the stopping points for each trip.
The operation returns the following: