U
PDATE COLLECTION
Update Collection
You can update a record, or document as it is called in MongoDB, by using the update_one() method.
The first parameter of the update_one() method is a query object defining which document to update.
Note: If the query finds more than one record, only the first occurrence is updated.
The second parameter is an object defining the new values of the document.
Change the address from "Valley" to "Canyon":
To update all documents that meets the criteria of the query, use the update_many() method.
Update all documents where the address starts with the letter "C":
PDATE COLLECTION
Update Collection
You can update a record, or document as it is called in MongoDB, by using the update_one() method.
The first parameter of the update_one() method is a query object defining which document to update.
Note: If the query finds more than one record, only the first occurrence is updated.
The second parameter is an object defining the new values of the document.
Change the address from "Valley" to "Canyon":
import pymongo
myclient = pymongo.MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
mydb = myclient["mydatabase"]
mycol = mydb["customers"]
myquery = { "address": "Valley 345" }
newvalues = { "$set": { "address": "Canyon 123" } }
mycol.update_one(myquery, newvalues) #print "customers" after the update:
for x in mycol.find():
print(x)
Update Manymyclient = pymongo.MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
mydb = myclient["mydatabase"]
mycol = mydb["customers"]
myquery = { "address": "Valley 345" }
newvalues = { "$set": { "address": "Canyon 123" } }
mycol.update_one(myquery, newvalues) #print "customers" after the update:
for x in mycol.find():
print(x)
To update all documents that meets the criteria of the query, use the update_many() method.
Update all documents where the address starts with the letter "C":
import pymongo
myclient = pymongo.MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
mydb = myclient["mydatabase"] mycol = mydb["customers"] myquery = { "address": { "$regex": "^S" } } newvalues = { "$set": { "name": "Minnie" } }
x = mycol.update_many(myquery, newvalues)
print(x.modified_count, "documents updated.")
myclient = pymongo.MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
mydb = myclient["mydatabase"] mycol = mydb["customers"] myquery = { "address": { "$regex": "^S" } } newvalues = { "$set": { "name": "Minnie" } }
x = mycol.update_many(myquery, newvalues)
print(x.modified_count, "documents updated.")
2 documents updated.
Comments
Post a Comment