r.literal(object) → special
Replace an object in a field instead of merging it with an existing object in a merge
or update
operation. Using literal
with no arguments in a merge
or update
operation will remove the corresponding field.
Assume your users table has this structure:
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"data": {
"age": 18,
"city": "Dallas"
}
}
...
]
Using update
to modify the data
field will normally merge the nested documents:
r.table('users').get(1).update({ data: { age: 19, job: 'Engineer' } }).run(conn, callback)
// Result passed to callback
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"data": {
"age": 19,
"city": "Dallas",
"job": "Engineer"
}
}
That will preserve city
and other existing fields. But to replace the entire data
document with a new object, use literal
.
Example: Replace one nested document with another rather than merging the fields.
r.table('users').get(1).update({ data: r.literal({ age: 19, job: 'Engineer' }) }).run(conn, callback)
// Result passed to callback
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice",
"data": {
"age": 19,
"job": "Engineer"
}
}
Example: Use literal
to remove a field from a document.
r.table('users').get(1).merge({ data: r.literal() }).run(conn, callback)
// Result passed to callback
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Alice"
}
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