To fix this, use $dateFromString in MongoDB aggregate(). The $dateFromString converts a date/time string to a date object.
Let us create a collection with documents −
> db.demo619.insertOne({"DueDate":"10-10-2020"});
{
"acknowledged" : true,
"insertedId" : ObjectId("5e99d7846c954c74be91e69e")
}
> db.demo619.insertOne({"DueDate":"12-01-2019"});
{
"acknowledged" : true,
"insertedId" : ObjectId("5e99d7996c954c74be91e69f")
}
> db.demo619.insertOne({"DueDate":"28-10-2010"});
{
"acknowledged" : true,
"insertedId" : ObjectId("5e99d7ab6c954c74be91e6a0")
}Display all documents from a collection with the help of find() method −
> db.demo619.find();
This will produce the following output −
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7846c954c74be91e69e"), "DueDate" : "10-10-2020" }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7996c954c74be91e69f"), "DueDate" : "12-01-2019" }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7ab6c954c74be91e6a0"), "DueDate" : "28-10-2010" }Following is the query to convert from ty date/time string to a date object −
> db.demo619.aggregate( [ {
... $project: {
... DueDate: {
... $dateFromString: {
... dateString: '$DueDate',
... timezone: 'America/New_York'
... }
... }
... }
... } ] )This will produce the following output −
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7846c954c74be91e69e"), "DueDate" : ISODate("2020-10-10T04:00:00Z") }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7996c954c74be91e69f"), "DueDate" : ISODate("2019-01-12T05:00:00Z") }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("5e99d7ab6c954c74be91e6a0"), "DueDate" : ISODate("2010-10-28T04:00:00Z") }