$bitXor (aggregation)
On this page
Definition
New in version 6.3.
Syntax
The $bitXor
operator has the following syntax:
{ $bitXor: [ <expression1>, <expression2>, ... ] }
Behavior
If the operands include both integers and long values, MongoDB sign-extends the calculated integer result and returns a long value. Otherwise, if the operands include only integers or only longs, MongoDB returns results with the corresponding value type.
Note
All numbers in mongosh
are doubles, not integers. To
specify integers in mongosh
, use the NumberInt()
or the
NumberLong()
constructor. To learn more, see Int32 or
Long.
To learn how your MongoDB driver handles numeric values, refer to your driver's documentation.
If any arguments in the array are of a different data type such as a string, double, or decimal, MongoDB returns an error.
If the argument is an empty array, the operation returns NumberInt(0)
.
If any of the arguments in the array equate to null
, the operation returns
null
.
Example
The example on this page uses the switches
collection:
db.switches.insertMany( [ { _id: 0, a: NumberInt(0), b: NumberInt(127) }, { _id: 1, a: NumberInt(2), b: NumberInt(3) }, { _id: 2, a: NumberInt(3), b: NumberInt(5) } ] )
The following aggregation uses the $bitXor
operator in the
$project
stage:
db.switches.aggregate( [ { $project: { result: { $bitXor: ["$a", "$b"] } } } ])
The operation returns the following results:
[ { _id: 0, result: 127 }, { _id: 1, result: 1 }, { _id: 2, result: 6 } ]