Field Paths
You can use field path expressions to access
fields in input documents. To specify a field path, prefix the field
name or the dotted field path (if the
field is in an embedded document) with a dollar sign $.
Use Cases
You can use field paths for the following use cases:
Nested Fields
The following example uses the planets collection from the Atlas Sample Databases. Each document in this collection has the following structure:
{    _id: new ObjectId("6220f6b78a733c51b416c80e"),    name: "Uranus",    orderFromSun: 7,    hasRings: true,    mainAtmosphere: [ "H2", "He", "CH4" ],    surfaceTemperatureC: { min: null, max: null, mean: -197.2 } } 
To specify the nested field  mean within the surfaceTemperatureC
field, use dot notation ("field.nestedField") with a dollar
sign $. The following aggregation pipeline projects only the
mean nested field value for each document:
db.planets.aggregate( [    {       $project: {          nested_field: "$surfaceTemperatureC.mean"       }    } ] ) 
Below is an example returned document:
{ _id: ObjectId('6220f6b78a733c51b416c80e'), nested_field: -197.2 } 
Array of Nested Fields
You can use dot notation in a field path to access a field that is nested within an array.
For example, consider a products collection that contains an
instock field. The instock field contains an array of nested
warehouse fields.
db.products.insertMany( [    { item: "journal", instock: [ { warehouse: "A"}, { warehouse: "C" } ] },    { item: "notebook", instock: [ { warehouse: "C" } ] },    { item: "paper", instock: [ { warehouse: "A" }, { warehouse: "B" } ] },    { item: "planner", instock: [ { warehouse: "A" }, { warehouse: "B" } ] },    { item: "postcard", instock: [ { warehouse: "B" }, { warehouse: "C" } ] } ] ) 
The following aggregation pipeline uses $instock.warehouse to access
the nested warehouse fields.
db.products.aggregate( [    {       $project: {          item: 1,          warehouses: "$instock.warehouse"       }    } ] ) 
In this example, $instock.warehouse outputs an array of values that
are in the nested warehouse field for each document. The pipeline
returns the following documents:
[    {       _id: ObjectId('6740b55e33b29cf6b1d884f7'),       item: "journal",       warehouses: [ "A", "C" ]    },    {       _id: ObjectId('6740b55e33b29cf6b1d884f8'),       item: "notebook",       warehouses: [ "C" ]    },    {       _id: ObjectId('6740b55e33b29cf6b1d884f9'),       item: "paper",       warehouses: [ "A", "B" ]    },    {       _id: ObjectId('6740b55e33b29cf6b1d884fa'),       item: "planner",       warehouses: [ "A", "B" ]    },    {       _id: ObjectId('6740b55e33b29cf6b1d884fb'),       item: "postcard",       warehouses: [ "B", "C" ]    } ] 
Array of Nested Arrays
You can also use dot notation with a dollar sign $ in a
field path to access an array within a nested array.
This example uses a fruits collection that contains the
following document:
db.fruits.insertOne(    {       _id: ObjectId("5ba53172ce6fa2fcfc58e0ac"),       inventory: [          {             apples: [                "macintosh",                "golden delicious",             ]          },          {             oranges: [                "mandarin",             ]          },          {             apples: [                "braeburn",                "honeycrisp",             ]          }       ]    } ) 
The document in the collection contains an inventory array where
each element in the array is an object that contains a nested array
field.
Consider the following aggregation pipeline:
db.fruits.aggregate( [    { $project:       { all_apples: "$inventory.apples" } } ] ) 
In this pipeline, $inventory.apples resolves to an array of nested
arrays. The pipeline returns the following document:
{    _id: ObjectId('5ba53172ce6fa2fcfc58e0ac'),    all_apples: [       [ "macintosh", "golden delicious" ],       [ "braeburn", "honeycrisp" ]    ] } 
Learn More
For more information on accessing and interacting with nested elements, see Dot Notation and Query an Array of Embedded Documents.