How would one take a JavaScript array of objects, such as
objArr = [
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:42},
{key:"Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:78},
{key:"Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:23},
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:54} // <- duplicate key
]
and merge duplicate keys by summing the values?
In order to get something like this:
reducedObjArr = [
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:96},
{key:"Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:78},
{key:"Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:23}
]
I have tried iterating and adding to a new array, but this didn't work:
var reducedObjArr = [];
var item = null, key = null;
for(var i=0; i<objArr.length; i++) {
item = objArr[i];
key = Object.keys(item)[0];
item = item[key];
if(!result[key]) {
result[key] = item;
} else {
result[key] += item;
}
}a
Rather than using a for loop and pushing values, you can directly use map and reduce:
let objArr = [
{key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 42},
{key: 'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 78},
{key: 'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 23},
{key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 54}
];
// first, convert data into a Map with reduce
let counts = objArr.reduce((prev, curr) => {
let count = prev.get(curr.key) || 0;
prev.set(curr.key, curr.val + count);
return prev;
}, new Map());
// then, map your counts object back to an array
let reducedObjArr = [...counts].map(([key, value]) => {
return {key, value}
})
console.log(reducedObjArr);
You should be assigning each object not found to the result with its .key property.
If it is found, then you need to add its .val.
var temp = {};
var obj = null;
for(var i=0; i < objArr.length; i++) {
obj=objArr[i];
if(!temp[obj.key]) {
temp[obj.key] = obj;
} else {
temp[obj.key].val += obj.val;
}
}
var result = [];
for (var prop in temp)
result.push(temp[prop]);
Also, part of the problem was that you were reusing the item variable to reference the value of .key, so you lost reference to the object.
Simpler reduce than posted elsewhere since it does not use a Map element
const objArr = [
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:42},
{key:"Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:78},
{key:"Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:23},
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:54}];
const output = objArr.reduce((accumulator, cur) => {
let date = cur.key;
let found = accumulator.find(elem => elem.key === date)
if (found) found.val += cur.val;
else accumulator.push(cur);
return accumulator;
}, []);
console.log(output)
You could use a hash table for the grouping by key.
var array = [{ key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 42 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 78 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 23 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 54}],
grouped = [];
array.forEach(function (o) {
if (!this[o.key]) {
this[o.key] = { key: o.key, val: 0 };
grouped.push(this[o.key]);
}
this[o.key].val += o.val;
}, Object.create(null));
console.log(grouped);
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }
Another approach is to collect all key/value pairs in a Map and format the final array with Array.from and a callback for the objects.
var array = [{ key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 42 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 78 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 23 }, { key: 'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val: 54 }],
grouped = Array.from(
array.reduce((m, { key, val }) => m.set(key, (m.get(key) || 0) + val), new Map),
([key, val]) => ({ key, val })
);
console.log(grouped);
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }
var objArr = [
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:42},
{key:"Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:78},
{key:"Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:23},
{key:"Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400", val:54}]
var targetObj = {};
for (var i = 0; i < objArr.length; i++) {
if (!targetObj.hasOwnProperty(objArr[i].key)) {
targetObj[objArr[i].key] = 0;
}
targetObj[objArr[i].key] += objArr[i].val;
}
console.log(targetObj);
One can use Array#reduce with an object to store the values for each key.
let arr = [{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:42},{key:'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:78},{key:'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:23},{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:54}];
let res = Object.values(arr.reduce((acc, curr)=>{
(acc[curr.key] = acc[curr.key] || {key: curr.key, val: 0}).val += curr.val;
return acc;
}, {}));
console.log(res);
In newer browsers, logical nullish assignment can be used.
let arr = [{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:42},{key:'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:78},{key:'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:23},{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:54}];
let res = Object.values(arr.reduce((acc, curr)=>{
(acc[curr.key] ??= {key: curr.key, val: 0}).val += curr.val;
return acc;
}, {}));
console.log(res);
Try this. It should help.
var arr1 = [
{ name: 'besart', value: 12 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 10 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 10 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 18 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 3 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 3 },
{ name: 'besart', value: 3 },
{ name: 'besart', value: 10 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 0 },
];
var arr2 = [];
var emri = "";
var value = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < arr1.length; i++) {
emri = arr1[0].name;
value += arr1[0].value;
for (var j = 1; j < arr1.length; j++) {
if (emri == arr1[j].name) {
value += arr1[j].value;
arr1.splice(j, 1);
j--;
}
}
arr1.splice(0, 1);
arr2[i] = {
name: emri,
value: value
};
value = 0;
}
console.log(arr2);
Below is another solution that uses only one loop (a while loop):
var arr1 = [
{ name: 'besart', value: 12 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 10 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 10 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 18 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 3 },
{ name: 'astrit', value: 3 },
{ name: 'besart', value: 3 },
{ name: 'besart', value: 10 },
{ name: 'besar', value: 0 },
];
var arr2 = [];
var emri = "";
var value = 0;
var i = 1;
var j = 0;
while (arr1.length != 0) {
emri = arr1[0].name;
if (emri == arr1[i].name) {
value += arr1[i].value;
arr1.splice(i, 1);
i--;
}
i++;
if (i == arr1.length) {
value += arr1[0].value;
i = 1;
arr2[j] = {
name: emri,
value: value
};
j++;
value = 0;
arr1.splice(0, 1);
}
}
console.log(arr2)
You can also try using the JavaScript linq framework which is exactly same as an SQL statement which is given desired output with less written code and effective and found at linq.js.
var objArr =
[
{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:42},
{key:'Mon Sep 24 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:78},
{key:'Mon Sep 25 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:23},
{key:'Mon Sep 23 2013 00:00:00 GMT-0400', val:54}
];
var aggregatedObject = Enumerable.From(objArr)
.GroupBy("$.key", null,
function (key, g) {
return {
key: key,
contributions: g.Sum("$.val")
}
})
.ToArray();
console.log(aggregatedObject);
<script src="http://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/linq.js/2.2.0.2/linq.min.js"></script>
Which is pretty easy as compare to looping.
Recently I needed a similar implementation and I used a similar solution offered by some guy that used the reduce function.
A few days later I wanted to implement something similar by myself and here is the result.
const users = [
{ id: 1, name: 'ernest', spent: 40 },
{ id: 2, name: 'ernest', spent: 40 },
{ id: 3, name: 'astrit', spent: 22 },
{ id: 4, name: 'astrit', spent: 2956 },
{ id: 5, name: 'astrit', spent: 22 },
{ id: 6, name: 'besart', spent: 40 },
{ id: 7, name: 'besart', spent: 100},
{ id: 8, name: 'besart', spent: 4000 }
];
const sum = [];
users.forEach(el => {
if(sum.length === 0) {
delete el.id;
sum.push(el);
}
else
{
const get = () => {
for(let i = 0; i < sum.length; i++) {
if(sum[i].name === el.name) {
return { stat: true, id: i };
}
}
}
let i = get();
if(i) {
sum[i.id].spent += el.spent;
}
else
{
delete el.id;
sum.push(el);
}
}
});
console.log(sum);
Output:
[ { name: 'ernest', spent: 80 }, { name: 'astrit', spent: 3000 }, { name: 'besart', spent: 4140 } ]
Here is an alternative for you, but similar to that of Explosion Pills. It reuses the original array rather than creating a new one or a different object. The sort may not be necessary and will slow things down a little, but it could be removed.
JavaScript
function reduceMyObjArr(arr) {
var temp = {},
index;
for (index = arr.length - 1; index >= 0; index -= 1) {
key = arr[index].key;
if (temp.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
arr[temp[key]].val += arr[index].val;
arr.splice(index, 1);
} else {
temp[key] = index;
}
}
arr.sort(function (a, b) {
if (a.key === b.key) {
return 0;
}
if (a.key < b.key) {
return -1;
}
return 1;
});
return arr;
}
var myObjArr = [{
key: "Mon Sep 23 2013 00: 00: 00 GMT - 0400",
val: 42
}, {
key: "Mon Sep 24 2013 00: 00: 00 GMT - 0400",
val: 78
}, {
key: "Mon Sep 25 2013 00: 00: 00 GMT - 0400",
val: 23
}, {
key: "Mon Sep 23 2013 00: 00: 00 GMT - 0400",
val: 54
}];
reduceMyObjArr(myObjArr);
console.log(myObjArr);
jsFiddle
And a jsperf that compares this (with and without the sort) against the accepted answer. You can improve the performance test by extending the data set.
function sumGroupBy(array, groupColumn, valueColumn) {
var res = []
array.forEach((item) => {
if(res.map((el) => el[groupColumn]).includes(item[groupColumn])) {
res.filter((el) => el[groupColumn] == item[groupColumn])[0][valueColumn] += item[valueColumn]
} else {
eval(`res.push({${groupColumn}: "${item[groupColumn]}", ${valueColumn}: ${item[valueColumn]} })`)
}
});
return res;
}
const pets = [
{type:"Dog", age:12},
{type:"Cat", age:13},
{type:"Dog", age:6},
{type:"Cat", age:18}
];
console.log(sumGroupBy(pets, 'type', 'age' ))
// [ { type: 'Dog', age: 18 }, { type: 'Cat', age: 31 } ]
function mergeDuplicatesBy(array, getKey, mergeWith) {
const buff = {}
array.forEach(function (arrayElement) {
const key = getKey(arrayElement)
const alreadyExistingVal = buff[key]
if (alreadyExistingVal) {
buff[key] = mergeWith(alreadyExistingVal, arrayElement)
} else {
buff[key] = arrayElement
}
})
return Object.values(buff)
}
mergeDuplicatesBy(
arr,
x => x.name,
(x, y) => ({ name: x.name, foo: x.foo + y.foo })
)
Given the following array of gigs:
const gigs = [
{
name: ' sat gig 1',
date: 'Sat Dec 10 2022'
},
{
name: ' sat gig 2',
date: 'Sat Dec 10 2022'
},
{
name: ' sun gig 1',
date: 'Sun Dec 11 2022'
},
{
name: ' sun gig 2',
date: 'Sun Dec 11 2022'
},
]
How do I map over it and render the gigs, but grouped by the gig date? I've included the desired output as follows, as well as my own attempt to solve this. I'd prefer to not use lodash.
Sat Dec 10
sat gig 1
sat gig 2
Sun Dec 11
sun gig 1
sun gig 2
Here's my attempt so far:
const gigs = [
{
name: ' sat gig 1',
date: '2022-12-10'
},
{
name: ' sat gig 2',
date: '2022-12-10'
},
{
name: ' sun gig 1',
date: '2022-12-11'
},
{
name: ' sun gig 2',
date: '2022-12-11'
},
]
const gigArray =[]
gigs.map(gig => {
const gigDate = new Date(gig.date)
const gigDateString = gigDate.toString().slice(0,15) //gives date in form 'Sun Dec 11 2022'
gigArray.push({date:gigDateString,name:gig.name})
})
const groupedObj = gigArray.reduce(
(prev, current) => ({
...prev,
[current]: [...(prev[current] || []), current],
}),
{}
);
const groupedObjToArr = Object.values(groupedObj);
Here's a reduce solution that creates an object with the dates as the keys:
const gigs=[{name:"sat gig 1",date:"Sat Dec 10 2022"},{name:"sat gig 2",date:"Sat Dec 10 2022"},{name:"sun gig 1",date:"Sun Dec 11 2022"},{name:"sun gig 2",date:"Sun Dec 11 2022"}];
const result = gigs.reduce((acc, curr) => {
if (acc[curr.date]) {
acc[curr.date].push(curr)
} else {
acc[curr.date] = [curr]
}
return acc;
}, {})
console.log(result)
From there, generating the output is simple:
const gigs=[{name:"sat gig 1",date:"Sat Dec 10 2022"},{name:"sat gig 2",date:"Sat Dec 10 2022"},{name:"sun gig 1",date:"Sun Dec 11 2022"},{name:"sun gig 2",date:"Sun Dec 11 2022"}];
const result = gigs.reduce((acc, curr) => {
if (acc[curr.date]) {
acc[curr.date].push(curr)
} else {
acc[curr.date] = [curr]
}
return acc;
}, {})
Object.keys(result).forEach(key => {
console.log(key)
result[key].forEach(val => console.log(val))
})
I am trying to get day wise count from below data
example:
{ 'Tue Oct 01 2019': 3, 'Tue Oct 02 2019': 1 }
But I'm not getting the expected result from the below code.
const data = [ { Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' },{ Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' },{ Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' }, { Date: 'Tue Oct 02 2019' } ];
const result = data.reduce((total, value) => {
total[value] = (total[value] || 0) + 1;
return total;
}, {});
console.log(result);
If I understood you correctly, what you want is to group and get count:
const data = [
{ Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' },
{ Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' },
{ Date: 'Tue Oct 01 2019' },
{ Date: 'Tue Oct 02 2019' }
];
const result = data.reduce((total, {Date}) => {
total[Date] = (total[Date] || 0) + 1;
return total;
}, {});
console.log(result);
value is an Object, use value.Date instead of just value :
const data = [
{ Date: "Tue Oct 01 2019" },
{ Date: "Tue Oct 01 2019" },
{ Date: "Tue Oct 01 2019" },
{ Date: "Tue Oct 02 2019" }
];
const result = data.reduce((total, value) => {
total[value.Date] = (total[value.Date] || 0) + 1;
return total;
}, {});
console.log(result);
Description
I'm trying to convert my realm object to an array as can be seen below in the history method.
class RealmStore {
#observable symptoms = {};
#observable meals = {};
#computed get history(){
return [...Object.values(this.symptoms), ...Object.values(this.meals)];
}
//More methods to populate this.symptoms and this.meals
}
When I log this.symptoms I get the following output in my terminal:
{
'0': {
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 15: 56: 48 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Regurgitation',
value: 1
},
'1': {
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 15: 58: 09 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Belching',
value: 1
},
'2': {
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 16: 10: 39 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Heartburn',
value: 2
},
'3': {
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 23: 30: 36 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Heartburn',
value: 1
}
}
When I log Object.keys(this.symptoms) I get the following in my terminal:
[ '0', '1', '2', '3' ]
When I log Object.values(this.symptoms) I get the following in my terminal:
[]
This is the only way that this works:
const values = [];
for(let prop in this.symptoms){
if(this.symptoms.hasOwnProperty(prop)){
values.push(this.symptoms[prop])
}
}
console.log(values);
This logs the following in my terminal:
[{
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 15: 56: 48 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Regurgitation',
value: 1
},
{
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 15: 58: 09 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Belching',
value: 1
},
{
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 16: 10: 39 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Heartburn',
value: 2
},
{
date: Fri Jun 29 2018 23: 30: 36 GMT + 0200(CEST),
name: 'Heartburn',
value: 1
}
]
Question:
What is causing the realmjs object to be unable to return an array of values?
Currently unsure as to why Object.values() does not work. I went ahead and used this alternative, which according to some posts may cause performance issues.
Array.from(this.symptoms);