vote up 0 vote down star

Ok, so on a web page, I've got a JavaScript object which I'm using as an associative array. This exists statically in a script block when the page loads:

var salesWeeks = {
    "200911" : ["11 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200910" : ["10 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200909" : ["09 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200908" : ["08 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200907" : ["07 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200906" : ["06 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200905" : ["05 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200904" : ["04 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200903" : ["03 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200902" : ["02 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200901" : ["01 / 2009", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200852" : ["52 / 2008", "Fiscal 2009"],
    "200851" : ["51 / 2008", "Fiscal 2009"]
};

The order of the key/value pairs is intentional, as I'm turning the object into an HTML select box such as this:

<select id="ddl_sw" name="ddl_sw">
<option value="">== SELECT WEEK ==</option>
<option value="200911">11 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200910">10 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200909">09 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200908">08 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200907">07 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200906">06 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200905">05 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200904">04 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200903">03 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200902">02 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200901">01 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200852">52 / 2008 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200851">51 / 2008 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
</select>

...with code that looks like this (snipped from a function):

var arr = [];
arr.push(
    "<select id=\"ddl_sw\" name=\"ddl_sw\">" +
    "<option value=\"\">== SELECT WEEK ==</option>"
);

for(var key in salesWeeks)
{
    arr.push(
    	"<option value=\"" + key + "\">" +
    	salesWeeks[key][0] + " (" + salesWeeks[key][1] + ")" +
    	"<\/option>"
    );
}

arr.push("<\/select>");

return arr.join("");

This all works fine in IE, FireFox and Opera.

However in Chrome, the order comes out all weird:

<select id="ddl_sw" name="ddl_sw">
<option value="">== SELECT WEEK ==</option>
<option value="200852">52 / 2008 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200908">08 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200906">06 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200902">02 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200907">07 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200904">04 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200909">09 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200903">03 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200905">05 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200901">01 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200910">10 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200911">11 / 2009 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
<option value="200851">51 / 2008 (Fiscal 2009)</option>
</select>

NOTE: This order, though weird, does not change on subsequent refreshes. It's always in this order.

So, what is Chrome doing? Some optimization in how it processes the loop?

In the first place, am I wrong to rely on the order that the key/value pairs are declared in any associative array?

I never questioned it before, I just assumed the order would hold because this technique has always worked for me in the other browsers. But I suppose I've never seen it stated anywhere that the order is guaranteed. Maybe it's not?

Any insight would be awesome. Thanks.

flag
There's no such thing as an "associative array" in javaScript! – J-P Mar 12 at 22:57

3 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

Think of an associative array as a paper sack into which all the key-value pairs are placed. As you reach your hand into the sack to look at the pairs (such as with the for...in loop), the order that you encounter them is for all practical purposes random.

If you want to see them in a specific order, you'll need to extract the keys into an array and sort it. Then walk across the array, using the keys you encounter to index into the associative array.

link|flag
Awesome, I was doing exactly that while watching this thread for a response :) I wasn't sure whether this was the case, but I had a feeling. Thanks! – Jerry Mar 12 at 22:48
All browsers other than chrome do property iteration in the order of insertion, so you should file a bug on chrome/v8 for not doing so. – olliej Mar 12 at 23:25
Chrome is correct; the actual spec says that order is not preserved. – Chase Seibert Mar 13 at 13:44
vote up 5 vote down

The order in which elements are stored in an associative array is not guaranteed. You'll have to sort your output explicitly.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

As the other answers say, the order in which an object's properties are iterated is not defined in the spec, even though the major browsers all iterate them in the defined order.

Chrome will enumerate them in order too, if all of the object's properties contain primitive values. John Resig gives more detail on Chrome's behavior here (under "for loop order"): http://ejohn.org/blog/javascript-in-chrome/

link|flag
Good point - I was wondering whether the behavior would differ had I not been storing reference objects as the values. Thanks for the link. – Jerry Mar 13 at 17:52

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.