Given an object of form listed below, what is best way to obtain keys that contain a particular value? For example in following structure, if we want all the objects that possess property1, we should get object1 and object2 as answer.
Or can this be stored in a specific type of data structure for quick retrieval?
Looping over values of all objects in one approach. I am looking for something faster than that. Would appreciate suggestions.
{
object1: [property1, property2, property3],
object2: [property1],
object3: [property2]
}
If you want a faster data structure for that purpose, then you could turn your object into an ES6 map, like this:
// Sample object:
var obj = {
key1: [1, 2, 3],
key2: [1],
key3: [2]
};
// Turn into map keyed by values
var m = Object.keys(obj).reduce( (m, key) =>
obj[key].reduce( (m, v) => m.set(v, (m.get(v) || []).concat(key)), m ),
new Map
);
// Example use of the map:
console.log('1 occurs in: ', m.get(1));
Try something like this
x = {
object1: ['property1', 'property2', 'property3'],
object2: ['property1'],
object3: ['property2']
}
z = Object.keys(x).filter(function(y) {
return x[y].indexOf('property1') !== -1
})
console.log(z)
This just loops, and filters each key in your object and then does an equality check on the array of values. Kinda
var l = [];
var dict = {...}
for (var key in dict) {
var obj = dict[key];
if (obj.indexOf("property1") != -1) {
l.push(obj);
}
}
l // Here is the result
Just use the filter() function over Object.keys(data) and check if each object contains the value. You can also map() the keys to the value itself if that's what you want.
const data = {
a: [1,2,3],
b: [1],
c: [2]
};
const searchValue = 1;
const keysWithValue = Object.keys(data).filter(key => data[key].includes(searchValue));
const objectsWithValue = keysWithValue.map(key => data[key]);
console.log(keysWithValue, objectsWithValue);
Loop through your array and test each time using this:
if(Obj.hasOwnProperty("<property name>")){
array.push(obj);
}
return array;
Check this code, i think, it will help you:
const list = {
object1: ['a', 'b', 'c'],
object2: ['a'],
object3: ['c']
}
function getData(list, value){
return Object.keys(list).filter( item => list[item].indexOf(value) !== -1)
}
getData(list, 'a');
Here is my object literal:
var obj = {key1: value1, key2: value2};
How can I add field key3 with value3 to the object?
There are two ways to add new properties to an object:
var obj = {
key1: value1,
key2: value2
};
Using dot notation:
obj.key3 = "value3";
Using square bracket notation:
obj["key3"] = "value3";
The first form is used when you know the name of the property. The second form is used when the name of the property is dynamically determined. Like in this example:
var getProperty = function (propertyName) {
return obj[propertyName];
};
getProperty("key1");
getProperty("key2");
getProperty("key3");
A real JavaScript array can be constructed using either:
The Array literal notation:
var arr = [];
The Array constructor notation:
var arr = new Array();
Year 2017 answer: Object.assign()
Object.assign(dest, src1, src2, ...) merges objects.
It overwrites dest with properties and values of (however many) source objects, then returns dest.
The Object.assign() method is used to copy the values of all enumerable own properties from one or more source objects to a target object. It will return the target object.
Live example
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
Object.assign(obj, {key3: "value3"});
document.body.innerHTML = JSON.stringify(obj);
Year 2018 answer: object spread operator {...}
obj = {...obj, ...pair, scalar};
From MDN:
It copies own enumerable properties from a provided object onto a new object.
Shallow-cloning (excluding prototype) or merging of objects is now possible using a shorter syntax than Object.assign().
Note that Object.assign() triggers setters whereas spread syntax doesn’t.
Live example
It works in current Chrome and current Firefox. They say it doesn’t work in current Edge.
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
var pair = {key3: "value3"};
var scalar = "value4"
obj = {...obj, ...pair, scalar};
document.body.innerHTML = JSON.stringify(obj);
Year 2019 answer
Object assignment operator +=:
obj += {key3: "value3"};
Oops... I got carried away. Smuggling information from the future is illegal. Duly obscured!
I have grown fond of the LoDash / Underscore when writing larger projects.
Adding by obj['key'] or obj.key are all solid pure JavaScript answers. However both of LoDash and Underscore libraries do provide many additional convenient functions when working with Objects and Arrays in general.
.push() is for Arrays, not for objects.
Depending what you are looking for, there are two specific functions that may be nice to utilize and give functionality similar to the the feel of arr.push(). For more info check the docs, they have some great examples there.
_.merge (Lodash only)
The second object will overwrite or add to the base object.
undefined values are not copied.
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
var obj2 = {key2:"value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined};
_.merge(obj, obj2);
console.log(obj);
// → {key1: "value1", key2: "value4", key3: "value3"}
_.extend / _.assign
The second object will overwrite or add to the base object.
undefined will be copied.
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
var obj2 = {key2:"value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined};
_.extend(obj, obj2);
console.log(obj);
// → {key1: "value1", key2: "value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined}
_.defaults
The second object contains defaults that will be added to base object if they don't exist.
undefined values will be copied if key already exists.
var obj = {key3: "value3", key5: "value5"};
var obj2 = {key1: "value1", key2:"value2", key3: "valueDefault", key4: "valueDefault", key5: undefined};
_.defaults(obj, obj2);
console.log(obj);
// → {key3: "value3", key5: "value5", key1: "value1", key2: "value2", key4: "valueDefault"}
$.extend
In addition, it may be worthwhile mentioning jQuery.extend, it functions similar to _.merge and may be a better option if you already are using jQuery.
The second object will overwrite or add to the base object.
undefined values are not copied.
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
var obj2 = {key2:"value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined};
$.extend(obj, obj2);
console.log(obj);
// → {key1: "value1", key2: "value4", key3: "value3"}
Object.assign()
It may be worth mentioning the ES6/ ES2015 Object.assign, it functions similar to _.merge and may be the best option if you already are using an ES6/ES2015 polyfill like Babel if you want to polyfill yourself.
The second object will overwrite or add to the base object.
undefined will be copied.
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2"};
var obj2 = {key2:"value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined};
Object.assign(obj, obj2);
console.log(obj);
// → {key1: "value1", key2: "value4", key3: "value3", key4: undefined}
You could use either of these (provided key3 is the acutal key you want to use)
arr[ 'key3' ] = value3;
or
arr.key3 = value3;
If key3 is a variable, then you should do:
var key3 = 'a_key';
var value3 = 3;
arr[ key3 ] = value3;
After this, requesting arr.a_key would return the value of value3, a literal 3.
Performance
Today 2020.01.14 I perform tests on MacOs HighSierra 10.13.6 on Chrome v78.0.0, Safari v13.0.4 and Firefox v71.0.0, for chosen solutions. I divide solutions to mutable (first letter M) and immutable (first letter I). I also provide few immutable solutions (IB,IC,ID/IE) not yet published in answers to this question
Conclusions
fastest mutable solutions are much faster than fastest immutable (>10x)
classic mutable approach like obj.key3 = "abc" (MA,MB) is fastest
for immutable solutions the {...obj, key3:'abc'} and Object.assign (IA,IB) are fastest
surprisingly there are immutable solutions faster than some mutable solutions for chrome (MC-IA) and safari (MD-IB)
Details
In snippet below there are presended tested solution, you can prefrom test on your machine HERE (update 2022: I send Big thanks to Josh DeLong who rewrite tests from jspref.com which stops working to jsbench.me)
var o = {
key1: true,
key2: 3,
};
var log= (s,f)=> console.log(`${s} --> ${JSON.stringify(f({...o}))}`);
function MA(obj) {
obj.key3 = "abc";
return obj;
}
function MB(obj) {
obj['key3'] = "abc";
return obj;
}
function MC(obj) {
Object.assign(obj, {key3:'abc'});
return obj;
}
function MD(obj) {
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'key3', {
value: "abc", // undefined by default
enumerable: true, // false by default
configurable: true, // false by default
writable: true // false by default
});
return obj;
}
function IA(obj) {
return {...obj, key3:'abc'};
}
function IB(obj) {
return Object.assign({key3:'abc'}, obj);
}
function IC(obj) {
let ob= JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(obj))
ob.key3 = 'abc';
return ob;
}
function ID(obj) {
let ob= Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj));
ob.key3 = 'abc';
return ob;
}
function IE(obj) {
return Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj).concat([['key3','abc']]))
}
log('MA',MA);
log('MB',MB);
log('MC',MC);
log('MD',MD);
log('IA',IA);
log('IB',IB);
log('IC',IC);
log('ID',ID);
log('IE',IE);
This snippet only presents code - it not perform tests itself!
arr.key3 = value3;
because your arr is not really an array... It's a prototype object. The real array would be:
var arr = [{key1: value1}, {key2: value2}];
but it's still not right. It should actually be:
var arr = [{key: key1, value: value1}, {key: key2, value: value2}];
The spread operator is a useful and quick syntax for adding items to arrays, combining arrays or objects, and spreading an array out into a function’s arguments.
Now, ES2018 comes with spread properties to object literals. It copies its own enumerable properties from a provided object onto a new object.
The spread syntax is useful for combining the properties and methods on objects into a new object:
You can add property in an object like this
const obj1 = {hello: "🤪"};
const obj2 = {...obj1, laugh: "😂" };
console.log('obj1', obj1)
console.log('obj2', obj2)
You can also combine objects like this
const objectOne = {hello: "🤪"}
const objectTwo = {world: "🐻"}
const objectThree = {...objectOne, ...objectTwo, laugh: "😂"}
console.log(objectThree) // Object { hello: "🤪", world: "🐻", laugh: "😂" }
const objectFour = {...objectOne, ...objectTwo, laugh: () => {console.log("😂".repeat(5))}}
objectFour.laugh() //
var employees = [];
employees.push({id:100,name:'Yashwant',age:30});
employees.push({id:200,name:'Mahesh',age:35});
Simply adding properties:
And we want to add prop2 : 2 to this object, these are the most convenient options:
Dot operator: object.prop2 = 2;
square brackets: object['prop2'] = 2;
So which one do we use then?
The dot operator is more clean syntax and should be used as a default (imo). However, the dot operator is not capable of adding dynamic keys to an object, which can be very useful in some cases. Here is an example:
const obj = {
prop1: 1
}
const key = Math.random() > 0.5 ? 'key1' : 'key2';
obj[key] = 'this value has a dynamic key';
console.log(obj);
Merging objects:
When we want to merge the properties of 2 objects these are the most convenient options:
Object.assign(), takes a target object as an argument, and one or more source objects and will merge them together. For example:
const object1 = {
a: 1,
b: 2,
};
const object2 = Object.assign({
c: 3,
d: 4
}, object1);
console.log(object2);
Object spread operator ...
const obj = {
prop1: 1,
prop2: 2
}
const newObj = {
...obj,
prop3: 3,
prop4: 4
}
console.log(newObj);
Which one do we use?
The spread syntax is less verbose and has should be used as a default imo. Don't forgot to transpile this syntax to syntax which is supported by all browsers because it is relatively new.
Object.assign() is more dynamic because we have access to all objects which are passed in as arguments and can manipulate them before they get assigned to the new Object.
I know there is already an accepted answer for this but I thought I'd document my idea somewhere. Please [people] feel free to poke holes in this idea, as I'm not sure if it is the best solution... but I just put this together a few minutes ago:
Object.prototype.push = function( key, value ){
this[ key ] = value;
return this;
}
You would utilize it in this way:
var obj = {key1: value1, key2: value2};
obj.push( "key3", "value3" );
Since, the prototype function is returning this you can continue to chain .push's to the end of your obj variable: obj.push(...).push(...).push(...);
Another feature is that you can pass an array or another object as the value in the push function arguments. See my fiddle for a working example: http://jsfiddle.net/7tEme/
Two most used ways already mentioned in most answers
obj.key3 = "value3";
obj["key3"] = "value3";
One more way to define a property is using Object.defineProperty()
Object.defineProperty(obj, 'key3', {
value: "value3", // undefined by default
enumerable: true, // false by default
configurable: true, // false by default
writable: true // false by default
});
This method is useful when you want to have more control while defining property.
Property defined can be set as enumerable, configurable and writable by user.
You can create a class with the answer of #Ionuț G. Stan
function obj(){
obj=new Object();
this.add=function(key,value){
obj[""+key+""]=value;
}
this.obj=obj
}
Creating a new object with the last class:
my_obj=new obj();
my_obj.add('key1', 'value1');
my_obj.add('key2', 'value2');
my_obj.add('key3','value3');
Printing the object
console.log(my_obj.obj) // Return {key1: "value1", key2: "value2", key3: "value3"}
Printing a Key
console.log(my_obj.obj["key3"]) //Return value3
I'm newbie in javascript, comments are welcome. Works for me.
We can add a key/value pair to a JavaScript object in many ways...
CASE - 1 : Expanding an object
Using this we can add multiple key: value to the object at the same time.
const rectangle = { width: 4, height: 6 };
const cube = {...rectangle, length: 7};
const cube2 = {...rectangle, length: 7, stroke: 2};
console.log("Cube2: ", cube2);
console.log("Cube: ", cube);
console.log("Rectangle: ", rectangle);
CASE - 2 : Using dot notation
var rectangle = { width: 4, height: 6 };
rectangle.length = 7;
console.log(rectangle);
CASE - 3 : Using [square] notation
var rectangle = { width: 4, height: 6 };
rectangle["length"] = 7;
console.log(rectangle);
Your example shows an Object, not an Array. In that case, the preferred way to add a field to an Object is to just assign to it, like so:
arr.key3 = value3;
A short and elegant way in next Javascript specification (candidate stage 3) is:
obj = { ... obj, ... { key3 : value3 } }
A deeper discussion can be found in Object spread vs Object.assign and on Dr. Axel Rauschmayers site.
It works already in node.js since release 8.6.0.
Vivaldi, Chrome, Opera, and Firefox in up to date releases know this feature also, but Mirosoft don't until today, neither in Internet Explorer nor in Edge.
var arrOfObj = [{name: 'eve'},{name:'john'},{name:'jane'}];
var injectObj = {isActive:true, timestamp:new Date()};
// function to inject key values in all object of json array
function injectKeyValueInArray (array, keyValues){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
if (!array.length)
return resolve(array);
array.forEach((object) => {
for (let key in keyValues) {
object[key] = keyValues[key]
}
});
resolve(array);
})
};
//call function to inject json key value in all array object
injectKeyValueInArray(arrOfObj,injectObj).then((newArrOfObj)=>{
console.log(newArrOfObj);
});
Output like this:-
[ { name: 'eve',
isActive: true,
timestamp: 2017-12-16T16:03:53.083Z },
{ name: 'john',
isActive: true,
timestamp: 2017-12-16T16:03:53.083Z },
{ name: 'jane',
isActive: true,
timestamp: 2017-12-16T16:03:53.083Z } ]
You can either add it this way:
arr['key3'] = value3;
or this way:
arr.key3 = value3;
The answers suggesting keying into the object with the variable key3 would only work if the value of key3 was 'key3'.
In case you have multiple anonymous Object literals inside an Object and want to add another Object containing key/value pairs, do this:
Firebug' the Object:
console.log(Comicbook);
returns:
[Object { name="Spiderman", value="11"}, Object { name="Marsipulami",
value="18"}, Object { name="Garfield", value="2"}]
Code:
if (typeof Comicbook[3]=='undefined') {
private_formArray[3] = new Object();
private_formArray[3]["name"] = "Peanuts";
private_formArray[3]["value"] = "12";
}
will add Object {name="Peanuts", value="12"} to the Comicbook Object
According to Property Accessors defined in ECMA-262(http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/Ecma-262.pdf, P67), there are two ways you can do to add properties to a exists object. All these two way, the Javascript engine will treat them the same.
The first way is to use dot notation:
obj.key3 = value3;
But this way, you should use a IdentifierName after dot notation.
The second way is to use bracket notation:
obj["key3"] = value3;
and another form:
var key3 = "key3";
obj[key3] = value3;
This way, you could use a Expression (include IdentifierName) in the bracket notation.
We can do this in this way too.
var myMap = new Map();
myMap.set(0, 'my value1');
myMap.set(1, 'my value2');
for (var [key, value] of myMap) {
console.log(key + ' = ' + value);
}
supported by most of browsers, and it checks if object key available or not you want to add, if available it overides existing key value and it not available it add key with value
example 1
let my_object = {};
// now i want to add something in it
my_object.red = "this is red color";
// { red : "this is red color"}
example 2
let my_object = { inside_object : { car : "maruti" }}
// now i want to add something inside object of my object
my_object.inside_object.plane = "JetKing";
// { inside_object : { car : "maruti" , plane : "JetKing"} }
example 3
let my_object = { inside_object : { name : "abhishek" }}
// now i want to add something inside object with new keys birth , gender
my_object.inside_object.birth = "8 Aug";
my_object.inside_object.gender = "Male";
// { inside_object :
// { name : "abhishek",
// birth : "8 Aug",
// gender : "Male"
// }
// }
You can create a new object by using the {[key]: value} syntax:
const foo = {
a: 'key',
b: 'value'
}
const bar = {
[foo.a]: foo.b
}
console.log(bar); // {key: 'value'}
console.log(bar.key); // value
const baz = {
['key2']: 'value2'
}
console.log(baz); // {key2: 'value2'}
console.log(baz.key2); // value2
With the previous syntax you can now use the spread syntax {...foo, ...bar} to add a new object without mutating your old value:
const foo = {a: 1, b: 2};
const bar = {...foo, ...{['c']: 3}};
console.log(bar); // {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
console.log(bar.c); // 3
Either obj['key3'] = value3 or obj.key3 = value3 will add the new pair to the obj.
However, I know jQuery was not mentioned, but if you're using it, you can add the object through $.extend(obj,{key3: 'value3'}). E.g.:
var obj = {key1: 'value1', key2: 'value2'};
$('#ini').append(JSON.stringify(obj));
$.extend(obj,{key3: 'value3'});
$('#ext').append(JSON.stringify(obj));
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<p id="ini">Initial: </p>
<p id="ext">Extended: </p>
jQuery.extend(target[,object1][,objectN]) merges the contents of two or more objects together into the first object.
And it also allows recursive adds/modifications with $.extend(true,object1,object2);:
var object1 = {
apple: 0,
banana: { weight: 52, price: 100 },
cherry: 97
};
var object2 = {
banana: { price: 200 },
durian: 100
};
$("#ini").append(JSON.stringify(object1));
$.extend( true, object1, object2 );
$("#ext").append(JSON.stringify(object1));
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<p id="ini">Initial: </p>
<p id="ext">Extended: </p>
Since its a question of the past but the problem of present. Would suggest one more solution: Just pass the key and values to the function and you will get a map object.
var map = {};
function addValueToMap(key, value) {
map[key] = map[key] || [];
map[key].push(value);
}
In order to prepend a key-value pair to an object so the for in works with that element first do this:
var nwrow = {'newkey': 'value' };
for(var column in row){
nwrow[column] = row[column];
}
row = nwrow;
Best way to achieve same is stated below:
function getKey(key) {
return `${key}`;
}
var obj = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2", [getKey('key3')]: "value3"};
//console.log(obj);
If I attach an additional property to an object, does it have to go at the end, or can I put it at a specified position.
function reassign(obj){
delete obj.c;
obj.c = "new three";
var t = "<table border=\"1\">";
for (var i in obj){
t += "<tr><td>" + obj[i] + "</td></tr>";
}
t += "</table>";
return t;
}
var obj = {
a : "one",
b : "two",
c : "three",
d : "four"
};
var reassigned = reassign(obj);
document.write(reassigned);
Would it be possible somehow to put the new obj.c in the third position again after it's been deleted, rather than having it appended to the end? Of course I could skip the delete part. But even without that, I could also for example intend inject alphabeta: "one point five" into the second position. Is it possible? Thanks!
jsbin
Array elements are ordered; object properties are not. You should never assume that object properties will be iterated in a particular order.
If order is important to you, create a new order:[] property which contains an array of property names, and you can iterate through that:
var obj = {
a : "one",
b : "two",
c : "three",
d : "four",
order : ['a','b','c','d']
};
Objects are unordered. You can either create an Array and break your object into Key-Value pairs or you can use an array to index object keys.
Option 1
var collection = [
{key1: value1},
{key2: value2},
{key3: value3}
];
Option 2
var obj = {
key1: value1,
key2: value2,
key3: value3
};
// you can index just the values
var index_to_value = [
obj['key1'],
obj['key2'],
obj['key3']
];
// or you can index by key, if necessary
var index_to_key = [
'key1', 'key2', 'key3'
];
And of course, if it doesn't interfere, you can put the index in the object:
var obj = {
key1: value1,
key2: value2,
key3: value3,
_index: [
'key1', 'key2', 'key3'
]
};
And, I'd recommend either using sort and a compare function or splicing to manage the index.
I'm trying to make a simple function that will swap the values of two properties on the same or different global objects.
object1 = {"key 1":"value 1"};
object2 = {"key 2":"value 2"};
swapValuesInObject ("object1['key 1']","object2['key 2']",true)
// should result in:
// object1 === {"key 1":"value 2"};
// object2 === {"key 2":"value 1"};
Another example:
object1 = {"key 1":"value 1", "key 2":"value 2"};
swapValuesInObject ("object1['key 1']","object1['key 2']",1===1)
// should result in:
// object1 === {"key 1":"value 2", "key 2":"value 1"};
Here's what I've been able to come up with so far, but it's not much. Getting hung up on how to do the assignment.
function swapValuesInObject(property1, property2, condition) {
if (condition) {
// temp assignment
var Obj1Value = property1;
// do the switcheroo
array1 = array2Value;
array2 = array1Value;
}
return true;
};
What's the proper way to do this?
With ES6 destructuring, you can now swap without a temp variable. This applies to not only swapping variable values as in [a, b] = [b, a] but more complex expressions involving properties of objects, like so: [obj.key1, obj.key2] = [obj.key2, obj.key1]. To avoid more redundancy, you need to use a swap function:
function swap(obj, key1, key2) {
[obj[key1], obj[key2]] = [obj[key2], obj[key1]];
}
swap(obj, 'key1', 'key2');
The same idea applies with two objects and two keys:
function swap(obj1, key1, obj2, key2) {
[obj1[key1], obj2[key2]] = [obj2[key2], obj1[key1]];
}
swap(obj1, 'key1', obj2, 'key2');
I would do it as follows:
var obj1 = {
"key1" : "value1",
"key2" : "Value2"
};
var obj2 = {
"key3" : "value3",
"key4" : "Value4"
};
function swap(sourceObj, sourceKey, targetObj, targetKey) {
var temp = sourceObj[sourceKey];
sourceObj[sourceKey] = targetObj[targetKey];
targetObj[targetKey] = temp;
}
swap(obj1, "key1", obj1, "key2");
swap(obj1, "key1", obj2, "key4");
In simple words,
var obj = {
"key1": "value1",
"key2": "Value2"
}
to assign value1 to key2 & value2 to key1
[obj['key1'], obj['key2']] = [obj['key2'], obj['key1']];