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I know the way to store js objects like this:

    localStorage.setItem('testObject', JSON.stringify(testObject));

    // Retrieve the object from storage
    var retrievedObject = localStorage.getItem('testObject');
console.log('retrievedObject: ', JSON.parse(retrievedObject));

The only problem that it is not saved by reference. There is a solution to this?

i want to be able to do this for example:

  var user = {name: "name"};
  localStorage.setItem('user', JSON.stringify(user));

    var retrievedUser = localStorage.getItem('user');
    var userFromSession = JSON.parse(retrievedUser );

 (user === userFromSession ) IS TRUE
6
  • "saved by reference": what do you mean by this?
    – Andy
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:17
  • also, what is the problem you're trying to solve in this manner?
    – aw04
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:17
  • Still dont understand the question...
    – tymeJV
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:21
  • eval(localStorage.getItem('testObject')) ;)
    – wwwmarty
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:21
  • 1
    is there a reason you must compare for equality in this way? surely you could use some sort of identifier?
    – aw04
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:22

2 Answers 2

1

A reference in the way you are speaking of it (===) is a pointer to a location in memory. You can not serialize and deserialize an object and expect it to have the same object pointer.

When you serialize something you create a new string object representation of it, and when you deserialize you create a new object, with its own reference pointer, which is based on the content of the JSON string.

5
  • Thanks. there is any way to this in another way?
    – user4198877
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:31
  • @student1001 that depends on whether you really need to know if they occupy the same place in memory or if you can come up with another acceptable definition of "equals"
    – aw04
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:33
  • To expand on the answer by @aw04. Your object only has a single property 'name', so you could assume that if new.name == old.name then they are equal - but they will never be the same single object.
    – Rob Hardy
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:35
  • Exactly, and if name is not good enough you might consider adding an id or something
    – aw04
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:38
  • It's also worth noting that === acts differently when referring to non-complex types, in which case it will return true if the objects have equal value and are the same type.
    – Rob Hardy
    Oct 30, 2014 at 16:40
1

You can't control memory in JavaScript, so there's no direct answer to this.

A common way to solve this is with IDs

function randomId(){ return Math.floor(Math.random()*1e10) }

// mapping of ids to user objects
var _users = {};

// creates a user and assigns a random id
function createUser(params){
  params.id = randomId();
  _users[params.id] = params;
  return params;
}

var user = createUser({name: 'foo'});
localStorage.setItem('user', JSON.stringify(user));
var userFromStorage = JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem('user'));

if (user.id === userFromStorage.id) {
  // ...
}

Or you can see if an existing user object exists with that id

if (_users[userFromStorage.id]) {
   // set it to the existing user object
   // you may wish to merge the objects, but I left that out
   userFromStorage = _users[userFromStorage.id];

}
else {
   // otherwise add it to the cache
   _users[userFromStorage.id] = userFromStorage;
}

Now modifying userFromStorage.name will change user.name.

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