I have a nested data structure containing objects and arrays. How can I extract the information, i.e. access a specific or multiple values (or keys)?
For example:
var data = { code: 42, items: [{ id: 1, name: 'foo' }, { id: 2, name: 'bar' }] };
How could I access the name
of the second item in items
?
You can access a nested array of objects either using dot notation or bracket notation. JavaScript has only one data type which can contain multiple values: Object. An Array is a special form of an object. Both arrays and objects expose a key -> value structure.
Accessing nested json objects is just like accessing nested arrays. Nested objects are the objects that are inside an another object. In the following example 'vehicles' is a object which is inside a main object called 'person'. Using dot notation the nested objects' property(car) is accessed.
If we want to access all the values of nested objects then we have to use recursion to access each and every level of that object. And it can get more complicated according to the nesting of the object. That why we have to use recursion to get all the values and access the whole nested object.
Objects can be nested inside other objects. Each nested object must have a unique access path. The same field name can occur in nested objects in the same document.
Oliver Steele's nested object access pattern The easiest and the cleanest way is to use Oliver Steele's nested object access pattern const name = ((user || {}).personalInfo || {}).name; With this notation, you'll never run into
A recursive approach for navigating the json is best, and how that recursion is leveraged will depend on the type of data being searched for. If there are conditional statements involved, a json searchcan be a good tool to use. If the property being accessed is already known, but the path is complex, for example in this object
JSON is a textual representation of data, just like XML, YAML, CSV, and others. To work with such data, it first has to be converted to JavaScript data types, i.e. arrays and objects (and how to work with those was just explained). How to parse JSON is explained in the question Parse JSON in JavaScript?. Further reading material
There is already a question about what you are referring to (and already including most of your solutions): Access Javascript nested objects safelyor Accessing nested JavaScript objects with string key. But anyway: "Unfortunately, you cannot access nested arrays with this trick."
JavaScript has only one data type which can contain multiple values: Object. An Array is a special form of object.
(Plain) Objects have the form
{key: value, key: value, ...}
Arrays have the form
[value, value, ...]
Both arrays and objects expose a key -> value
structure. Keys in an array must be numeric, whereas any string can be used as key in objects. The key-value pairs are also called the "properties".
Properties can be accessed either using dot notation
const value = obj.someProperty;
or bracket notation, if the property name would not be a valid JavaScript identifier name [spec], or the name is the value of a variable:
// the space is not a valid character in identifier names const value = obj["some Property"]; // property name as variable const name = "some Property"; const value = obj[name];
For that reason, array elements can only be accessed using bracket notation:
const value = arr[5]; // arr.5 would be a syntax error // property name / index as variable const x = 5; const value = arr[x];
JSON is a textual representation of data, just like XML, YAML, CSV, and others. To work with such data, it first has to be converted to JavaScript data types, i.e. arrays and objects (and how to work with those was just explained). How to parse JSON is explained in the question Parse JSON in JavaScript? .
How to access arrays and objects is fundamental JavaScript knowledge and therefore it is advisable to read the MDN JavaScript Guide, especially the sections
A nested data structure is an array or object which refers to other arrays or objects, i.e. its values are arrays or objects. Such structures can be accessed by consecutively applying dot or bracket notation.
Here is an example:
const data = { code: 42, items: [{ id: 1, name: 'foo' }, { id: 2, name: 'bar' }] };
Let's assume we want to access the name
of the second item.
Here is how we can do it step-by-step:
As we can see data
is an object, hence we can access its properties using dot notation. The items
property is accessed as follows:
data.items
The value is an array, to access its second element, we have to use bracket notation:
data.items[1]
This value is an object and we use dot notation again to access the name
property. So we eventually get:
const item_name = data.items[1].name;
Alternatively, we could have used bracket notation for any of the properties, especially if the name contained characters that would have made it invalid for dot notation usage:
const item_name = data['items'][1]['name'];
undefined
back?Most of the time when you are getting undefined
, the object/array simply doesn't have a property with that name.
const foo = {bar: {baz: 42}}; console.log(foo.baz); // undefined
Use console.log
or console.dir
and inspect the structure of object / array. The property you are trying to access might be actually defined on a nested object / array.
console.log(foo.bar.baz); // 42
If the property names are unknown or we want to access all properties of an object / elements of an array, we can use the for...in
[MDN] loop for objects and the for
[MDN] loop for arrays to iterate over all properties / elements.
Objects
To iterate over all properties of data
, we can iterate over the object like so:
for (const prop in data) { // `prop` contains the name of each property, i.e. `'code'` or `'items'` // consequently, `data[prop]` refers to the value of each property, i.e. // either `42` or the array }
Depending on where the object comes from (and what you want to do), you might have to test in each iteration whether the property is really a property of the object, or it is an inherited property. You can do this with Object#hasOwnProperty
[MDN].
As alternative to for...in
with hasOwnProperty
, you can use Object.keys
[MDN] to get an array of property names:
Object.keys(data).forEach(function(prop) { // `prop` is the property name // `data[prop]` is the property value });
Arrays
To iterate over all elements of the data.items
array, we use a for
loop:
for(let i = 0, l = data.items.length; i < l; i++) { // `i` will take on the values `0`, `1`, `2`,..., i.e. in each iteration // we can access the next element in the array with `data.items[i]`, example: // // var obj = data.items[i]; // // Since each element is an object (in our example), // we can now access the objects properties with `obj.id` and `obj.name`. // We could also use `data.items[i].id`. }
One could also use for...in
to iterate over arrays, but there are reasons why this should be avoided: Why is 'for(var item in list)' with arrays considered bad practice in JavaScript?.
With the increasing browser support of ECMAScript 5, the array method forEach
[MDN] becomes an interesting alternative as well:
data.items.forEach(function(value, index, array) { // The callback is executed for each element in the array. // `value` is the element itself (equivalent to `array[index]`) // `index` will be the index of the element in the array // `array` is a reference to the array itself (i.e. `data.items` in this case) });
In environments supporting ES2015 (ES6), you can also use the for...of
[MDN] loop, which not only works for arrays, but for any iterable:
for (const item of data.items) { // `item` is the array element, **not** the index }
In each iteration, for...of
directly gives us the next element of the iterable, there is no "index" to access or use.
In addition to unknown keys, the "depth" of the data structure (i.e. how many nested objects) it has, might be unknown as well. How to access deeply nested properties usually depends on the exact data structure.
But if the data structure contains repeating patterns, e.g. the representation of a binary tree, the solution typically includes to recursively [Wikipedia] access each level of the data structure.
Here is an example to get the first leaf node of a binary tree:
function getLeaf(node) { if (node.leftChild) { return getLeaf(node.leftChild); // <- recursive call } else if (node.rightChild) { return getLeaf(node.rightChild); // <- recursive call } else { // node must be a leaf node return node; } } const first_leaf = getLeaf(root);
const root = { leftChild: { leftChild: { leftChild: null, rightChild: null, data: 42 }, rightChild: { leftChild: null, rightChild: null, data: 5 } }, rightChild: { leftChild: { leftChild: null, rightChild: null, data: 6 }, rightChild: { leftChild: null, rightChild: null, data: 7 } } }; function getLeaf(node) { if (node.leftChild) { return getLeaf(node.leftChild); } else if (node.rightChild) { return getLeaf(node.rightChild); } else { // node must be a leaf node return node; } } console.log(getLeaf(root).data);
A more generic way to access a nested data structure with unknown keys and depth is to test the type of the value and act accordingly.
Here is an example which adds all primitive values inside a nested data structure into an array (assuming it does not contain any functions). If we encounter an object (or array) we simply call toArray
again on that value (recursive call).
function toArray(obj) { const result = []; for (const prop in obj) { const value = obj[prop]; if (typeof value === 'object') { result.push(toArray(value)); // <- recursive call } else { result.push(value); } } return result; }
const data = { code: 42, items: [{ id: 1, name: 'foo' }, { id: 2, name: 'bar' }] }; function toArray(obj) { const result = []; for (const prop in obj) { const value = obj[prop]; if (typeof value === 'object') { result.push(toArray(value)); } else { result.push(value); } } return result; } console.log(toArray(data));
Since the structure of a complex object or array is not necessarily obvious, we can inspect the value at each step to decide how to move further. console.log
[MDN] and console.dir
[MDN] help us doing this. For example (output of the Chrome console):
> console.log(data.items) [ Object, Object ]
Here we see that that data.items
is an array with two elements which are both objects. In Chrome console the objects can even be expanded and inspected immediately.
> console.log(data.items[1]) Object id: 2 name: "bar" __proto__: Object
This tells us that data.items[1]
is an object, and after expanding it we see that it has three properties, id
, name
and __proto__
. The latter is an internal property used for the prototype chain of the object. The prototype chain and inheritance is out of scope for this answer, though.
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