I have an object for a given verb such as...
var schlafen = {
ger: "schlafen",
eng: "sleep",
stem: "schlaf",
pp: "geschlafen",
sp: "schlief",
type: "verb",
reflexive: false
};
I would like to be able to identify and reference the object and it's properties when my script comes across an instance of one of it's properties such as...
var example = "geschlafen";
I am trying to get to the object itself from only one of it's properties so that I can then use another one of it's properties(for example, the "type" property) to identify an instance of "geschlafen" as a verb.
One option would be to create an index object that maps the values back to the associated object, for example:
var index = {};
function indexObject(obj) {
var keys = ['ger', 'eng', 'stem', 'pp', 'sp'];
for (var i = 0; i < keys.length; i++) {
if (obj[keys[i]]) {
index[obj[keys[i]]] = obj;
}
}
}
// index your schlafen object (you would also want to do this for other objects)
indexObject(schlafen);
var example = "geschlafen";
// lookup the object using your index
var obj = index[example];
// make sure we got the correct object back (should log 'true')
console.log(obj === schlafen);
Related
I think I've seen how to create a JSON object without first preparing it. This is how i prepare it:
obj = {
0:{
type:{}
},
1:{},
2:{}
};
Now I think I can insert a value like: obj.0.type = "type0"; But I'd like to create it while using it: obj['0']['type'] = "Type0";.
Is it possible, or do I need to prepare it? I'd like to create it "on the fly"!
EDIT
I'd like to create JS object "On the fly".
var obj = {};
obj.test = "test"; //One "layer" works fine.
obj.test.test = "test" //Two "layers" do not work... why?
obj = {
0:{
type:{}
},
1:{},
2:{}
};
Now i think i can insert value like: obj.0.type = "type0";
I guess you mean "assign" a value, not "insert". Anyway, no, you can't, at least not this way, because obj.0 is invalid syntax.
But I'd like to create it while using it: obj['0']['type'] = "Type0";
That's fine. But you need to understand you are overwriting the existing value of obj[0][type], which is an empty object ({}), with the string Type0. To put it another way, there is no requirement to provide an initialized value for a property such as type in order to assign to it. So the following would have worked equally well:
obj = {
0:{},
1:{},
2:{}
};
Now let's consider your second case:
var obj = {};
obj.test = "test"; //One "layer" works fine.
obj.test.test = "test" //Two "layers" do not work... why?
Think closely about what is happening. You are creating an empty obj. You can assign to any property on that object, without initializing that property. That is why the assignment to obj.test works. Then in your second assignment, you are attempting to set the test property of obj.test, which you just set to the string "test". Actually, this will work--because strings are objects that you can set properties on. But that's probably not what you want to do. You probably mean to say the previous, string value of obj.test is to be replaced by an object with its own property "test". To do that, you could either say
obj.test = { test: "test" };
Or
obj.test = {};
obj.test.test = "test";
You are creating a plain object in JavaScript and you need to define any internal attribute before using it.
So if you want to set to "Type0" an attribute type, inside an attribute 0 of an object obj, you cannot simply:
obj['0']['type'] = "Type0";
You get a "reference error". You need to initialize the object before using it:
var obj = {
0: {
type: ""
}
};
obj['0']['type'] = "Type0";
console.log(obj['0']['type']);
You could create your own function that takes key as string and value and creates and returns nested object. I used . as separator for object keys.
function create(key, value) {
var obj = {};
var ar = key.split('.');
ar.reduce(function(a, b, i) {
return (i != (ar.length - 1)) ? a[b] = {} : a[b] = value
}, obj)
return obj;
}
console.log(create('0.type', 'type0'))
console.log(create('lorem.ipsum.123', 'someValue'))
Is it necessary to create nested objects before using it?
Yes it is, at least the parent object must exist.
Example:
var object = {};
// need to assign object[0]['prop'] = 42;
create the first property with default
object[0] = object[0] || {};
then assign value
object[0]['prop'] = 42;
var object = {};
object[0] = object[0] || {};
object[0]['prop'] = 42;
console.log(object);
Create object with property names as array
function setValue(object, keys, value) {
var last = keys.pop();
keys.reduce(function (o, k) {
return o[k] = o[k] || {};
}, object)[last] = value;
}
var object = {};
setValue(object, [0, 'prop'], 42);
console.log(object);
I have a js object that looks like this:
var object = {
"divisions": {
"ocd-division/country:us": {
"name": "United States",
}
}
};
I want to access the property listed under the nested object "ocd-division/country:us" (aka "name"), but the problem I'm having is that "ocd-division/country" is a variable object. Like it might be ":can" for Canada or something.
My question is, can I still access the name property under that object even though it's variable? I wrote the code I came up with below, but it calls the object literally, so it can't account for a change in the object's name.
var country = document.getElementById("p");
p.innerHTML = object.divisions["ocd-division/country:us"].name;
I'm new to JavaScript so I'm sorry if this is a dumb question.
When you don't know the properties of an object, you can use
for...in loop
It iterates enumerable own and enumerable inherited properties.
Object.keys
It returns an array which contains enumerable own properties.
Object.getOwnPropertyNames
It returns an array which contains own properties.
// Adding properties: "ownEnumerable", "ownNonEnumerable",
// "inheritedEnumerable" and "inheritedNonEnumerable"
var obj = Object.defineProperties({}, {
ownEnumerable: {enumerable: true},
ownNonEnumerable: {},
});
Object.defineProperties(Object.prototype, {
inheritedEnumerable: {enumerable: true},
inheritedNonEnumerable: {},
});
// Display results
function log(id, arr) {
document.getElementById(id).textContent = '[' + arr.join(', ') + ']';
}
log('forin', function(forInProps){
for (var prop in obj) forInProps.push(prop);
return forInProps;
}([]));
log('keys', Object.keys(obj));
log('names', Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj));
<dl>
<dt><code>for...in</code></dt><dd id="forin"></dd>
<dt><code>Object.keys</code></dt><dd id="keys"></dd>
<dt><code>Object.getOwnPropertyNames</code></dt><dd id="names"></dd>
</dl>
object.divisions[Object.keys(object.divisions)[0]].name
Sure...
for (var division in object.divisions) {
var name = object.divisions[division].name;
// Do what you want with name here
}
If the object has prototype methods you will want to use Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty() to ensure they don't get iterated like so:
for (var division in object.divisions) {
if (!object.divisions.hasOwnProperty(division)) continue;
var name = object.divisions[division].name;
// Do what you want with name here
}
Or use Object.keys() if you don't care about IE8 support and iterate over those.
Object.keys(object.divisions).forEach(function(division) {
var name = object.divisions[division].name;
// Do what you want with name here
});
EDIT: Upon re-reading your question it occurs to me that you may already know the key name but want to access the object with a variable key name, which is also absolutely fine:
var division = 'ocd-division/country:us';
object.divisions[division].name;
When using [] bracket notation to access an object you can insert any code that evaluates to a string, you could even call a function in there that returns a string.
See: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Property_Accessors
You can iterate through object using for loop.
var obj = {
"divisions":{
"ocd-division/country:us":{
"name" : "United States"
}
}
}
Here is the for loop
for(var a in obj){ //loop first the object
for(var b in obj[a]){ // then second object (divisions)
for(var c in obj[a][b]){ //then third object (ocd-division/country:us)
if(c == 'name'){ //c is the key of the object which is name
console.log(obj[a][b][c]); //print in console the value of name which is United States.
obj[a][b][c] = "Canada"; //replace the value of name.
var objName = obj[a][b][c]; //or pass it on variable.
}
}
}
}
console.log(obj); //name: Canada
console.log(objName); //name: United States
You can also use this reference:
https://developer.mozilla.org/enUS/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/for
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8312459/iterate-through-object-properties
Is there a way in JavaScript to discover the object that an attribute belongs to? I know that sounds ridiculous, here's an example:
Obj = {};
Obj._name = "name";
var x = Obj._name;
In this example, is there a way to discover what object 'x' refers to?
Thank you
Not really, no - there's no back-reference checking or anything like that available in JS.
The only way this would kind of work would be if you had access to all the objects in question, in some kind of a collection, and could check each one for the property value.
This just returns the first object with a value that matches though, it's not guaranteed to be the source of the value.
var myObjs = [
{name: 'one'},
{name: 'two'},
{name: 'three'}
];
function findObjWithVal(val, objs) {
for (var i = 0; i < objs.length; i++) {
for (var p in objs[i]) {
if (objs[i].hasOwnProperty(p) && objs[i][p] === val) {
return objs[i];
}
}
}
}
console.log(findObjWithVal('two', myObjs)); // [object Object] { name: "two" }
What you're asking for is only really possible in a tight-set grouping of objects, with unique property values, where you know x is always a property value of one of the objects from the set, and no other object will have that property value. Pretty specific use case.
If you simply want the object to be attached to the string variable, you could do something like this:
var Obj = {
_name: 'Chad',
_address: '123 Main Street'
};
function string(val, obj) {
var s= new String(val);
s.obj= obj;
return s;
}
var x = string(Obj._name, Obj);
document.body.innerHTML= x + ' ' + x.obj._address; //Chad 123 Main Street
Referring to x would return Chad. But you have access to all the object's properties by referring to x.obj.
I have an array of objects like so
myobj= [{"item1" : info in here},{"item2" : info in here}, {"item3" : info in here}]
I'm trying to modify one, but I only know its key. I need to pinpoint the item1 object so I can change its value (the values are random and I don't know them, so I can't rely upon them).
If I could just get the index of the item it would be pretty easy: myobj[index].value = "newvalue".
Maybe using the index isn't the best way, so if it isn't, I'm open to other ideas.
I was thinking I could try something like
myobj.objectVar
Where objectVar is the key I'm being passed (item1, for example), however this does not work, possibly because it's a variable? Is it possible to use a variable like this maybe?
If it helps, I'm using underscore.js as well.
Your guess at a solution doesn't work because you're not accessing the individual objects, you're accessing an array of objects, each of which has a single property.
To use the data in the format you've got now, you need to iterate over the outer array until you find the object that contains the key you're after, and then modify its value.
myobj= [{"item1" : info in here},{"item2" : info in here}, {"item3" : info in here}]
function setByKey(key, value) {
myObj.forEach(function (obj) {
// only works if your object's values are truthy
if (obj[key]) {
obj[key] = value;
}
});
}
setByKey('item1', 'new value');
Of course, the far better solution is to stop using an array of single-property objects, and just use one object with multiple properties:
myobj= {"item1" : info in here, "item2" : info in here, "item3" : info in here};
Now, you can simply use myObject.item1 = "some new value" and it will work fine.
You can write a function like,
function getElementsHavingKey(key) {
var objectsHavingGivenKey = [];
//loop through all the objects in the array 'myobj'
myobj.forEach(function(individualObject) {
//you can use 'hasOwnProperty' method to find whether the provided key
// is present in the object or not
if(individualObject.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
// if the key is present, store the object having the key
// into the array (many objects may have same key in it)
objectsHavingGivenKey.push(individualObject);
}
});
// return the array containing the objects having the keys
return objectsHavingGivenKey;
}
If you only want to get the index of elements having the given key
You can do something like this,
function getIndexesOfElementsHavingKey(key) {
var objectsHavingGivenKey = [];
//loop through all the objects in the array 'myobj'
myobj.forEach(function(individualObject, index) {
//you can use 'hasOwnProperty' method to find whether the provided key
// is present in the object or not
if(individualObject.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
//push index of element which has the key
objectsHavingGivenKey.push(index);
}
});
// returns the array of element indexes which has the key
return objectsHavingGivenKey;
}
Try this code:
function changeObj( obj, key, newval )
{
for( var i=0, l=obj.length; i<j; i++)
{
if( key in obj[i] )
{
obj[i] = newval;
return;
}
}
}
var myObjArray= [{"item1" : "info in here"},{"item2" : "info in here"}, {"item3" : "info in here"}]
To find and add new value to the object inside an array:
myObjArray.forEach(function(obj) {
for(var key in obj) {
// in case you're matching key & value
if(key === "item1") {
obj[key] = "update value";
// you can even set new property as well
obj.newkey = "New value";
}
}
});
You can access objects the same using their index, even the object inside the original object.
Is this kind of what your looking for:
var otherObj = [{"oitem":"oValue"}];
var myobj= [{"item1" : otherObj},{"item2" : "2"}, {"item3" : "tesT"}];
myobj[0].item1[0].oitem = "newvalue";
alert(myobj[0].item1[0].oitem);
I have a string such as :
key = "person.name.first"
Is it possible to convert that to...
{
person: {
name: {
first: '????'
}
}
}
You could write a small recursive utility function to achieve this in java script
var key = "person.name.first".split("\.");
var obj = {};
function create(o,index){
if(index > key.length-1) return;
o[key[index]] = {};
index++;
create(o[key[index-1]],index);
}
// Call the recursive function:
create(obj,0);
Then you could set the value as: person.name.first = "value";
If you would want to set the values, or dynamically set the type of each field such as an array or object, you could have an mapping array, which holds the type for each field and could be read during the creation.