Saturday, November 2, 2024
Google search engine
HomeLanguagesPython MongoDB – find_one_and_delete query

Python MongoDB – find_one_and_delete query

MongoDB is a cross-platform document-oriented and a non relational (i.e NoSQL) database program. It is an open-source document database, that stores the data in the form of key-value pairs.

find_one_and_delete()

This function is used to delete a single document from the collection based on the filter that we pass and returns the deleted document from the collection. It finds the first matching document that matches the filter and deletes it from the collection i.e finds a single document and deletes it, returning the document.

Syntax: 

Collection.find_one_and_delete(filter, projection=None, sort=None, session=None, **kwargs) 

Parameters:

  • ‘filter’ : A query that matches the document to delete. 
  • ‘projection’ (optional): A list of field names that should be returned in the 
    result document or a mapping specifying the fields to include or exclude. If 
    ‘projection’ is a list “_id” will always be returned. Use a mapping to exclude 
    fields from the result (e.g. projection={‘_id’: False}). 
  • sort’ (optional): A list of (key, direction) pairs specifying the sort order for 
    the query. If multiple documents match the query, they are sorted and the first is deleted. 
  • ‘session’ (optional): A class: “~pymongo.client_session.ClientSession”. 
  • ‘**kwargs’ (optional): Additional command arguments can be passed as keyword arguments 
      (for example maxTimeMS can be used with recent server versions).  

The sample database is as follows:

The database on which we operate.

Example 1:

Python3




# importing Mongoclient from pymongo
from pymongo import MongoClient
 
 
# Making Connection
myclient = MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
 
# database
db = myclient["mydatabase"]
 
# Created or Switched to collection
# names: GeeksForGeeks
Collection = db["GeeksForGeeks"]
 
# Defining the filter that we want to use.
Filter ={'Manufacturer': 'Apple'}
 
# Using find_one_and_delete() function.
print("The returned document is:")
print(Collection.find_one_and_delete(Filter))
 
# Printing the data in the collection
# after find_one_and_delete() operation.
print("\nThe data after find_one_and_delete() operation is:")
 
for data in Collection.find():
    print(data)


Output :

Example 2:

In this example we delete the Redmi data from the database using the find_one_and_delete() method:

Python3




# importing Mongoclient from pymongo
from pymongo import MongoClient
 
 
# Making Connection
myclient = MongoClient("mongodb://localhost:27017/")
 
# database
db = myclient["mydatabase"]
 
# Created or Switched to collection
# names: GeeksForGeeks
Collection = db["GeeksForGeeks"]
 
# Defining the filter that we want to use.
Filter ={'Manufacturer': 'Redmi'}
 
# Using find_one_and_delete() function.
print("The returned document is:")
print(Collection.find_one_and_delete(Filter)
 
# Printing the data in the collection
# after find_one_and_delete() operation.
print("\nThe data after find_one_and_delete() operation is:")
 
for data in Collection.find():
    print(data)


Output :

Dominic Rubhabha-Wardslaus
Dominic Rubhabha-Wardslaushttp://wardslaus.com
infosec,malicious & dos attacks generator, boot rom exploit philanthropist , wild hacker , game developer,
RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments