1

i am new to JS objects. I have such code

var foo = {
    bar0: {
        barr0: function() {//doo stuff}
        barr1: function() {//doo stuff}
    },
    bar1: {
        barr0: function() {//do stuff}
        barr1: function() {//do stuff}
    },
    bar2: function() {//do stuff}
}

now i have this variable myVar that holds the 'name' of any of the above in the format they would be called. like it can have bar0.barr1 or bar2 or mention to any other of the above objects. foo will not be a part of myVar because it is common for every call. One possible solution is to use eval but i would like to avoid it if possible.

if the object was one dimensional i would have used foo[myVar]() but this is now multidimensional and i hav no idea how should i call it.

2 Answers 2

2

You need to apply some scripting then.

// define our access string and copy a reference from foo into level
var myVar = 'bar0.barr1',
    level = foo;

// split that access string into an Array (splitted by dots) and loop over it
myVar.split(/\./).forEach(function( prop ) {
    // if the property name ("bar0", "barr1") is available in our target object
    if( prop in level ) {
        // overwrite our level variable with the new object property reference, so somekind "climb up" the latter if we're dealing with nested objects
        level = level[ prop ];
    }
});

// if we're done, check if level holds a function reference and if so, execute it.
if( typeof level === 'function' ) {
    level();
}
5
  • can you please add some comments describing what the above code does? and should i wrap this into a function? since i will need to call it multiple times..
    – Achshar
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:06
  • how will this work with the third dimension and beyond? from what i understand, it overrides the level var with each additional 'dimension' so in bar0.barr0.barrr0 level will be barr0['barrr0'] .. but it has to be bar[barr0][barrr0] right?
    – Achshar
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:21
  • Not all browsers know about forEach.
    – Catherine
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:30
  • oh okiee.. never mind.. it replaced level with what level was before + new prop. Thanks a ton.. it works like a charm :D
    – Achshar
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:31
  • @whitequark no worries.. it is for a chrome app which requires minimum version 13 ;)
    – Achshar
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:32
0

There is no difference for multidimensional, just keep adding square brackets:

foo[myVar][myvar2]()

Edit: Never mind, misunderstood the question, which is ironic because I actually asked almost exactly this question!

In javascript how can I dynamically get a nested property of an object

1
  • i cant.. myVar is only one variable that has all the levels of objects.
    – Achshar
    Aug 9, 2011 at 10:02

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