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I'm trying to access a property of an object that is nested inside an object. Am I approaching it the wrong way, is my syntax wrong, or both? I had more 'contacts objects inside, but eliminated them to shrink this post.

var friends = {
    steve:{
        firstName: "Rob",
        lastName: "Petterson",
        number: "100",
        address: ['Thor Drive','Mere','NY','11230']
    }
};

//test notation this works:
//alert(friends.steve.firstName);

function search(name){
    for (var x in friends){
        if(x === name){
               /*alert the firstName of the Person Object inside the friends object
               I thought this alert(friends.x.firstName);
               how do I access an object inside of an object?*/
        }
    }
}  

search('steve');
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1 Answer 1

6

It is either

friends.steve.firstName

or

friends["steve"].firstName

You don't need the for-loop, though:

function search(name){
    if (friends[name]) alert(friends[name].firstName);
}
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  • A question on a similar topic; why can't I use the dot notation? //this works function search(name){ if(friends[name]){ alert(friends[name].firstName); } //this does not function search(name){ if(friends.name){ alert(friends.name.firstName); } } Oct 1, 2013 at 0:41
  • 2
    @brooklynsweb - the dot notation can only be used with constant strings known at the time the code is written. It cannot be used with strings stored in a variable. For names stored in a variable or argument, you use the obj[varname] notation.
    – jfriend00
    Oct 1, 2013 at 0:46
  • @brooklynsweb To elaborate what jfriend00 wrote... if you write friends.name, how can JavaScript know if you mean a "field called (literally) name" or a "field named whatever it says in a variable name"? The bracket notation lets you specify that: friend[name] is a "field named whatever it says in a variable name", while friend["name"] is a "field called (literally) name". Oct 1, 2013 at 7:21

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