RETURN

The RETURN statement can be used to produce the result of a query. It is mandatory to specify a RETURN statement at the end of each block in a data-selection query, otherwise the query result would be undefined. Using RETURN on the main level in data-modification queries is optional.

Syntax

The general syntax for RETURN is:

RETURN expression

There is also a variant RETURN DISTINCT.

The expression returned by RETURN is produced for each iteration in the block the RETURN statement is placed in. That means the result of a RETURN statement is always an array. This includes an empty array if no documents matched the query and a single return value returned as array with one element.

To return all elements from the currently iterated array without modification, the following simple form can be used:

FOR variableName IN expression
  RETURN variableName

As RETURN allows specifying an expression, arbitrary computations can be performed to calculate the result elements. Any of the variables valid in the scope the RETURN is placed in can be used for the computations.

Usage

To iterate over all documents of a collection called users and return the full documents, you can write:

FOR u IN users
  RETURN u

In each iteration of the for-loop, a document of the users collection is assigned to a variable u and returned unmodified in this example. To return only one attribute of each document, you could use a different return expression:

FOR u IN users
  RETURN u.name

Or to return multiple attributes, an object can be constructed like this:

FOR u IN users
  RETURN { name: u.name, age: u.age }

Note: RETURN will close the current scope and eliminate all local variables in it. This is important to remember when working with subqueries.

Dynamic attribute names are supported as well:

FOR u IN users
  RETURN { [ u._id ]: u.age }

The document _id of every user is used as expression to compute the attribute key in this example:

[
  {
    "users/9883": 32
  },
  {
    "users/9915": 27
  },
  {
    "users/10074": 69
  }
]

The result contains one object per user with a single key/value pair each. This is usually not desired. For a single object, that maps user IDs to ages, the individual results need to be merged and returned with another RETURN:

RETURN MERGE(
  FOR u IN users
    RETURN { [ u._id ]: u.age }
)
[
  {
    "users/10074": 69,
    "users/9883": 32,
    "users/9915": 27
  }
]

Keep in mind that if the key expression evaluates to the same value multiple times, only one of the key/value pairs with the duplicate name will survive MERGE(). To avoid this, you can go without dynamic attribute names, use static names instead and return all document properties as attribute values:

FOR u IN users
  RETURN { name: u.name, age: u.age }
[
  {
    "name": "John Smith",
    "age": 32
  },
  {
    "name": "James Hendrix",
    "age": 69
  },
  {
    "name": "Katie Foster",
    "age": 27
  }
]

RETURN DISTINCT

RETURN can optionally be followed by the DISTINCT keyword. The DISTINCT keyword will ensure uniqueness of the values returned by the RETURN statement:

FOR variableName IN expression
  RETURN DISTINCT expression

RETURN DISTINCT is not allowed on the top-level of a query if there is no FOR loop preceding it.

Below example returns ["foo", "bar", "baz"]:

FOR value IN ["foo", "bar", "bar", "baz", "foo"]
  RETURN DISTINCT value

RETURN DISTINCT will not change the order of the results it is applied on, unlike COLLECT.

If the DISTINCT is applied on an expression that itself is an array or a subquery, the DISTINCT will not make the values in each array or subquery result unique, but instead ensure that the result contains only distinct arrays or subquery results. To make the result of an array or a subquery unique, simply apply the DISTINCT for the array or the subquery.

For example, the following query will apply DISTINCT on its subquery results, but not inside the subquery:

FOR what IN 1..2
  RETURN DISTINCT (
    FOR i IN [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 3 ] 
      RETURN i
  )

Here we will have a FOR loop with two iterations that each execute a subquery. The DISTINCT here is applied on the two subquery results. Both subqueries return the same result value (that is [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 3 ]), so after DISTINCT there will only be one occurrence of the value [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 3 ] left:

[
  [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 3 ]
]

If the goal is to apply the DISTINCT inside the subquery, it needs to be moved there:

FOR what IN 1..2
  LET sub = (
    FOR i IN [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 3 ] 
      RETURN DISTINCT i
  ) 
  RETURN sub

In the above case, the DISTINCT will make the subquery results unique, so that each subquery will return a unique array of values ([ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]). As the subquery is executed twice and there is no DISTINCT on the top-level, that array will be returned twice:

[
  [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ],
  [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ]
]