Since this question is used as a duplicate target:
Use an array is good advice if the information you want to access is keyed numerically. If it isn't, you have two options:
Use an object and dynamic property access
Use a Map
(ES2015+)
Using an object
You can access object properties using a string (or, in ES2015+, a Symbol) via brackets notation, so you can store information in an object to access later using strings/Symbols:
var theData = Object.assign(Object.create(null), {
x: "ecks",
y: "why"
});
var key = Math.random() < 0.5 ? "x" : "y";
console.log("key = " + key + ", theData[key] = " + theData[key]);
Using a Map
You can use a Map instead of an object even with strings or Symbols as keys, but unlike objects, Map keys can be any JavaScript value (except negative 0, but hey, good enough):
const theData = new Map([
["x", "ecks"],
["y", "why"]
]);
const key = Math.random() < 0.5 ? "x" : "y";
console.log("key = " + key + ", theData.get(key) = " + theData.get(key));
That example uses strings, but again, Map keys can be any type. A Map key can even be an object.