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Access elements of a object inside a object
Suppose this is the object inside object: let MyObject = { person : [ { name: "abc", age: 100 }, { name: "xyz", age: 20 } ] } Suppose I want to get the 2nd person's name Though i can access like this console.log(MyObject.person[1].name); But what if i don't know the index of that element thats is [1] in this case ? (Imagine there are 100 of such objects inside the MyObject and I want to access a random one out of it) So how can i access it without knowing the index of the object in that array?
6 Respostas
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Let's say you want to find a person by name rather than by index, you could use a `for of` loop:
const findPerson = (name, persons) => {
for(person of persons){
if(person.name == name) return person
}
return false
}
let person = findPerson("xyz", MyObject.person)
However, I personally make use of Array functions based on the many different use cases.
The following is an equivalent to the previous code:
let person = (MyObject.person
.find(item => item.name == "xyz") ?? false)
Things can get more advanced from here. But, this should give you an idea.
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[Part 3 of 3 Follow Up]
So... finally you can remove the isMatch function and replace the following:
items.find(isMatch)
with:
items.find(item => item === "xyz")
It's all equivalent.
Hopefully, this gives you a clearer understanding. 😉👌
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David Carroll Can u pls explain me a bit about the last 3rd and 4th line 😅(sry for inconvenience I understood it now ) Thanks for helping @David Carroll
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[Part 1 of 3 Follow Up]
Spend some time reading about this on the MDN website:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/find
I'll try to shorten the code to focus on the key parts:
const items = [
{name: "abc"},
{name: "xyz"}
]
items.find(item => item.name === "xyz")
NOTE: `items` is an Array.
Arrays have specific methods that allow for additional capabilities for iterating items.
Many of these Array methods, like Array.find(...) expect a function that returns a Boolean value to indicate if an item is a match. These functions are known as predicates.
The predicate function used for Array.find() requires an arg for the current item of an array.
This predicate could have been written as:
function isMatch(item) {
return item.name === "xyz"
}
items.find(isMatch)
Note: isMatch function is passed to the Array.find() method as a predicate function.
(continued...)
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[Part 2 of 3 Follow Up]
Now... let's rewrite isMatch as an arrow function:
const isMatch = (item) => {
return item.name === "xyz"
}
This particular arrow function can be simplified by removing the (...), {...}, and the `return` keyword:
const isMatch = item => item.name === "xyz"
Again... the above line is equivalent to the earlier named function:
function isMatch(item) {
return item.name === "xyz"
}
Visually compare the two examples to build a mental map of each part of the different function types.
Essentially... the left side of the arrow "=>" defines the parameter arg "(item)" and the right side defines the function body with an implicit return statement:
{ return item.name === "xyz" }
A reference to `isMatch` - without the parenthesis - is the equivalent of defining an arrow function and passing it without a name:
item => item.name === "xyz"
This is known as an anonymous function, where isMatch is a named function.
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David Carroll Yes , this has given me a very good idea about not only my question but i also learnt a bit of few new things in js .Thanks a lot for ur help.