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I am creating an array with the below code.

The single functions work fine so far, my only problem with the loop is how to create the variables (nameX and dataX) dynamically from each item in the array.

Example: My array is [item1,item2,item3]. In this case the variables should be name1, data1, name2, data2, name3, data3 (nameX and dataX are just placeholders here for now).

My code:

//get unique items
var inputSearch = new Array();
$('td.searchTerm').each(function() {
    if( ($(this).text() != '') && ($(this).text() != ' ') ) {
        if(inputSearch.indexOf($(this).text()) == -1) {
            inputSearch.push( $(this).text() );
        }
    }
});

//loop through array to get volumes per item
var i;
for (i = 0; i < inputSearch.length; i++) {
    var nameX = inputSearch[i].replace(/\s+/g, '');
    var dataX = [];
    var xSum = 0;
    $('#myTable tbody tr').each(function() {
        if ($(this).find('td:contains(' + nameX + ')').length === 0) {
            dataX.push(0);
        } else {
            xSum = 0;
            $(this).find('td:contains(' + nameX + ')').each(function() {
                 xSum += parseInt($(this).next('td').text());
            });

            dataX.push(xSum);
        }
    });
}

Update: I found a way to create the name variable dynamically, so now only the data variable is missing:

window['name' + i.toString()] = inputSearch[i].replace(/\s+/g, '');

Many thanks for any help with this, Tim.

11
  • "In this case the variables should be name1, data1, name2, data2, name3, data3" - You most definitely don't want that.
    – Tomalak
    Apr 7, 2014 at 10:25
  • It doesnt matter how they are called but they need to be named different so that they dont overwrite each other. Apr 7, 2014 at 10:36
  • You still don't want that. You never want to use numbered variables of any kind, especially not a variable amount of them. That's what arrays are for.
    – Tomalak
    Apr 7, 2014 at 10:37
  • 1
    Please add as to what purpose you want the "numbered" variables, so perhaps we can help solve it using an array. An array in essence is exactly that, numbered variables, just that their name is array[x] Apr 7, 2014 at 10:44
  • 1
    I need two things: A list of unique items (currently my first array) + a list of the values next to these items (currently my second array). Both of these are required as separate lists, not combined in one. Apr 7, 2014 at 11:29

1 Answer 1

1

As I said in the comments, don't try to create "variable variables". Only pain and suffering lies down that path.

Here is a way to solve what you seem to be trying without resorting to ugly hacks.

var searchTerm = {};

$('td.searchTerm').each(function () {
    var term = $.trim( $(this).text() ), 
        name = term.replace(/\s+/g, '_');

    // prevent empty or non-unique entries
    if ( !term || searchTerm.hasOwnProperty(term) ) return;

    // sum up table values for the current term
    searchTerm[term] = 0;
    $('#myTable tbody td:contains(' + name + ')').each(function () {
        searchTerm[term] += parseInt( $(this).next('td').text(), 10 );
    });
});

Would give you something like this:

searchTerm = {
    "foo": 10,
    "bar": 20,
    "baz": 0
};

Think about handling mixed case appropriately. Currently foo and Foo are different terms, which might or might not be what you need.

There is an easy way to extend jQuery with a case-insensitive :contains selector.

2
  • Thanks. Is there a way I can access the numbers (10, 20, 0) out of this array ? I need these separated from the item names. Apr 7, 2014 at 12:48
  • What's wrong with filling a separate array, the way I indicated it in my comment to your question?
    – Tomalak
    Apr 7, 2014 at 12:51

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