Once in a while, you may need to loop through Objects in JavaScript. The only way to do so before ES6 is with a for...in
loop.
The problem with a for...in
loop is that it iterates through properties in the Prototype chain. When you loop through an object with the for...in
loop, you need to check if the property belongs to the object. You can do this with hasOwnProperty
.
for (var property in object) {
if (object.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
// Do things here
}
}
We no longer have to rely on for...in
and hasOwnProperty
now. There's a better way.
A better way to loop through objects
The better way to loop through objects is first to convert the object into an array. Then, you loop through the array.
You can convert an object into an array with three methods:
Object.keys
Object.values
Object.entries
Object.keys
Object.keys
creates an array that contains the properties of an object. Here's an example.
const fruits = {
apple: 28,
orange: 17,
pear: 54,
}
const keys = Object.keys(fruits)
console.log(keys) // [apple, orange, pear]
Object.values
Object.values
creates an array that contains the values of every property in an object. Here's an example:
const fruits = {
apple: 28,
orange: 17,
pear: 54,
}
const values = Object.values(fruits)
console.log(values) // [28, 17, 54]
Object.entries
Object.entries
creates an array of arrays. Each inner array has two item. The first item is the property; the second item is the value.
Here's an example:
const fruits = {
apple: 28,
orange: 17,
pear: 54,
}
const entries = Object.entries(fruits)
console.log(entries)
// [
// [apple, 28],
// [orange, 17],
// [pear, 54]
// ]
My favorite of the three is Object.entries
because you get both the key and property values.
Looping through the array
Once you've converted the object into an array with Object.keys
, Object.values
, or Object.entries
, you can loop through it as if it was a normal array.
// Looping through arrays created from Object.keys
const keys = Object.keys(fruits)
for (const key of keys) {
console.log(key)
}
// Results:
// apple
// orange
// pear
If you use Object.entries
you might want to destructure the array into its key and property.
for (const [fruit, count] of entries) {
console.log(`There are ${count} ${fruit}s`)
}
// Result
// There are 28 apples
// There are 17 oranges
// There are 54 pears
Wrapping up
The better way to loop through objects is first convert it into an array with one of these three methods.
Object.keys
Object.values
Object.entries
Then, you loop through the results like a normal array.
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