846

I need to sort JavaScript objects by key.

Hence the following:

{ 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas', 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf' }

Would become:

{ 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf', 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas' }
10
  • 3
    possible duplicate of Sorting a JSON object in Javascript
    – abraham
    Feb 25, 2012 at 2:35
  • 71
    Back in 2011 (when this question was posted), the ECMAScript spec said that JavaScript objects don’t have an inherent order — the observed order was implementation-dependent and thus couldn’t be relied upon. However, it turns out all JavaScript engines implemented more or less the same semantics, so those have now been standardized in ES6. As a result, a lot of the answers below used to be correct as per the spec, but are now incorrect. Jun 28, 2015 at 17:37
  • 1
    shortly saying use sorted stringify when you need to compare or hash the results: npmjs.com/package/json-stable-stringify
    – exebook
    Oct 29, 2015 at 11:11
  • Given that objects are just maps, or dicts depending on your language, there is little to no reason why you would do this. THAT BEING SAID, Generally, the order that they are injected into a map is in fact the order they reside when stringifying. SO, if you created a new map and assigned values based on a presorted key list, you will find yourself an ordered map based on keys Jun 28, 2018 at 22:04
  • 8
    Note that ever since Object.entries and Object.fromEntries were added to JS, this can be achieved with a nicely short one-liner: Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj).sort()) May 20, 2020 at 0:09

38 Answers 38

828

The other answers to this question are outdated, never matched implementation reality, and have officially become incorrect now that the ES6 / ES2015 spec has been published.


See the section on property iteration order in Exploring ES6 by Axel Rauschmayer:

All methods that iterate over property keys do so in the same order:

  1. First all Array indices, sorted numerically.
  2. Then all string keys (that are not indices), in the order in which they were created.
  3. Then all symbols, in the order in which they were created.

So yes, JavaScript objects are in fact ordered, and the order of their keys/properties can be changed.

Here’s how you can sort an object by its keys/properties, alphabetically:

const unordered = {
  'b': 'foo',
  'c': 'bar',
  'a': 'baz'
};

console.log(JSON.stringify(unordered));
// → '{"b":"foo","c":"bar","a":"baz"}'

const ordered = Object.keys(unordered).sort().reduce(
  (obj, key) => { 
    obj[key] = unordered[key]; 
    return obj;
  }, 
  {}
);

console.log(JSON.stringify(ordered));
// → '{"a":"baz","b":"foo","c":"bar"}'

Use var instead of const for compatibility with ES5 engines.

18
  • 10
    I really cant see a difference to your code and the top answer here apart from using a slightly different looping technique. Whether or not the objects can be said to be "ordered" or not seems to be irrelevant. The answer to this question is still the same. The published spec merely confirms the answers here.
    – Phil
    Sep 22, 2015 at 14:44
  • 7
    FYI, it was clarified that the enumeration order of properties is still undefined: esdiscuss.org/topic/… Dec 1, 2015 at 14:41
  • 9
    @Phil_1984_ This answer and top voted answer are very different. OP's question was how to sort an object literal. Top voted answer says you can't, then gives a workaround by storing sorted keys in an array, then iterating and printing key value pairs from the sorted array. This answer claims that the order of object literals are now sortable and his example stores the sorted key values back to an object literal, then prints the sorted object directly. On a side note, it would be nice if the linked site still existed. Mar 14, 2016 at 5:25
  • 6
    Both answers simply use the Array.sort function to sort the keys first. The OP is asking to sort a "JavaScript object" and is merely using JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) to describe the 2 objects. These 2 objects are logically identical meaning sorting is irrelevant. I think the top answer explains this a lot better. Saying "all other answers are now officially incorrect" is too extreme for me, especially with a broken link. I think the problem is "this new ES6 spec" is giving the illusion that Javascript objects have an ordered list of keys which is simply not true.
    – Phil
    Mar 14, 2016 at 16:25
  • 2
    Please add that this solution is not supported by a variety of modern browsers (google "caniuse ES6"). Using this answers risks hard-to-find bugs in certain browsers only (e.g. Safari when Chrome is all fine). May 2, 2016 at 12:00
263

JavaScript objects1 are not ordered. It is meaningless to try to "sort" them. If you want to iterate over an object's properties, you can sort the keys and then retrieve the associated values:

var myObj = {
    'b': 'asdsadfd',
    'c': 'masdasaf',
    'a': 'dsfdsfsdf'
  },
  keys = [],
  k, i, len;

for (k in myObj) {
  if (myObj.hasOwnProperty(k)) {
    keys.push(k);
  }
}

keys.sort();

len = keys.length;

for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
  k = keys[i];
  console.log(k + ':' + myObj[k]);
}


Alternate implementation using Object.keys fanciness:

var myObj = {
    'b': 'asdsadfd',
    'c': 'masdasaf',
    'a': 'dsfdsfsdf'
  },
  keys = Object.keys(myObj),
  i, len = keys.length;

keys.sort();

for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
  k = keys[i];
  console.log(k + ':' + myObj[k]);
}


1Not to be pedantic, but there's no such thing as a JSON object.

15
  • 4
    @MarcelKorpel There is such thing as a JSON object. Check section 8 of the official JSON RFC: ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
    – Paul
    Jul 12, 2013 at 20:02
  • 10
    @Paulpro two things to note about that RFC: first, it's 7 years old at this point, and vocabulary changes over time; second, "This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind." Whether a given sequence of characters represents a JavaScript object literal or a JSON text depends on context/usage. The term "JSON object" conflates and makes the distinction ambiguous in a detrimental way. Let's be rid of the imprecise terminology, and use the more precise term where possible. I see no reason to do otherwise. Words matter.
    – Matt Ball
    Jul 12, 2013 at 20:33
  • 7
    @MattBall IMO JSON Object is a very precise term for a string like {"a", 1} just as JSON Array is precise term for a string like [1]. It is useful to be able to communicate by saying things like the third object in my array when you have the string [{x: 1}, {y: 2}, {z: 3}], so I much prefer "That is not a JSON object" when commenting about a Javascript literal, rather then "There is no such thing as a JSON object", which is just going to cause more confusion and communication difficulties later when the OP actually is working with JSON.
    – Paul
    Jul 12, 2013 at 20:48
  • 3
    @Paulpro I must disagree. {"a", 1} is either an object literal or a JSON text (aka JSON string, if you really prefer). Which it is depends on context, the former if it appears verbatim within JavaScript source code, the latter if it's a string that needs to be passed to a JSON parser to be used further. There are real differences between the two when it comes to allowed syntax, correct usage, and serialization.
    – Matt Ball
    Jul 12, 2013 at 21:01
  • 9
    Now that ES6/ES2015 is finalized, this answer has officially become incorrect. See my answer for more info. Jun 28, 2015 at 17:24
251

A lot of people have mention that "objects cannot be sorted", but after that they are giving you a solution which works. Paradox, isn't it?

No one mention why those solutions are working. They are, because in most of the browser's implementations values in objects are stored in the order in which they were added. That's why if you create new object from sorted list of keys it's returning an expected result.

And I think that we could add one more solution – ES5 functional way:

function sortObject(obj) {
    return Object.keys(obj).sort().reduce(function (result, key) {
        result[key] = obj[key];
        return result;
    }, {});
}

ES2015 version of above (formatted to "one-liner"):

const sortObject = o => Object.keys(o).sort().reduce((r, k) => (r[k] = o[k], r), {})

Short explanation of above examples (as asked in comments):

Object.keys is giving us a list of keys in provided object (obj or o), then we're sorting those using default sorting algorithm, next .reduce is used to convert that array back into an object, but this time with all of the keys sorted.

5
  • 10
    @Pointy This behavior has always available in all major browsers, and has been standardized in ES6/ES2015. I’d say this is good advice. Jun 28, 2015 at 17:26
  • 4
    This is the simplest and most concise way of accomplishing task in EcmaScript v5. A bit late to the party but should be the accepted answer. Jul 12, 2015 at 12:55
  • 2
    "They are, because in most of the browser's implementations values in objects are stored in the order in which they were added" Only for non-numerical properties though. Also note that there is still no guarantee in which order the properties are iterated over (e.g. via for...in). Feb 18, 2016 at 16:17
  • 1
    True one liner: const sortObject = o => Object.keys(o).sort().reduce((r, k) => (r[k] = o[k], r), {}) Mar 14, 2016 at 5:29
  • 9
    My linter complained about that one-liner (returning an assignment), but this one works for me and is easier for me to read: Object.keys(dict).sort().reduce((r, k) => Object.assign(r, { [k]: dict[k] }), {});
    – aks.
    Jun 22, 2017 at 22:48
101

Guys I'm figuratively shocked! Sure all answers are somewhat old, but no one did even mention the stability in sorting! So bear with me I'll try my best to answer the question itself and go into details here. So I'm going to apologize now it will be a lot to read.

Since it is 2018 I will only use ES6, the Polyfills are all available at the MDN docs, which I will link at the given part.


Answer to the question:

If your keys are only numbers then you can safely use Object.keys() together with Array.prototype.reduce() to return the sorted object:

// Only numbers to show it will be sorted.
const testObj = {
  '2000': 'Articel1',
  '4000': 'Articel2',
  '1000': 'Articel3',
  '3000': 'Articel4',
};

// I'll explain what reduces does after the answer.
console.log(Object.keys(testObj).reduce((accumulator, currentValue) => {
  accumulator[currentValue] = testObj[currentValue];
  return accumulator;
}, {}));

/**
 * expected output:
 * {
 * '1000': 'Articel3',
 * '2000': 'Articel1',
 * '3000': 'Articel4',
 * '4000': 'Articel2' 
 *  } 
 */

// if needed here is the one liner:
console.log(Object.keys(testObj).reduce((a, c) => (a[c] = testObj[c], a), {}));

However if you are working with strings I highly recommend chaining Array.prototype.sort() into all of this:

// String example
const testObj = {
  'a1d78eg8fdg387fg38': 'Articel1',
  'z12989dh89h31d9h39': 'Articel2',
  'f1203391dhj32189h2': 'Articel3',
  'b10939hd83f9032003': 'Articel4',
};
// Chained sort into all of this.
console.log(Object.keys(testObj).sort().reduce((accumulator, currentValue) => {
  accumulator[currentValue] = testObj[currentValue];
  return accumulator;
}, {}));

/**
 * expected output:   
 * { 
 * a1d78eg8fdg387fg38: 'Articel1',
 * b10939hd83f9032003: 'Articel4',
 * f1203391dhj32189h2: 'Articel3',
 * z12989dh89h31d9h39: 'Articel2' 
 * }
 */

// again the one liner:
console.log(Object.keys(testObj).sort().reduce((a, c) => (a[c] = testObj[c], a), {}));

If someone is wondering what reduce does:

// Will return Keys of object as an array (sorted if only numbers or single strings like a,b,c).
Object.keys(testObj)

// Chaining reduce to the returned array from Object.keys().
// Array.prototype.reduce() takes one callback 
// (and another param look at the last line) and passes 4 arguments to it: 
// accumulator, currentValue, currentIndex and array
.reduce((accumulator, currentValue) => {

  // setting the accumulator (sorted new object) with the actual property from old (unsorted) object.
  accumulator[currentValue] = testObj[currentValue];

  // returning the newly sorted object for the next element in array.
  return accumulator;

  // the empty object {} ist the initial value for  Array.prototype.reduce().
}, {});

If needed here is the explanation for the one liner:

Object.keys(testObj).reduce(

  // Arrow function as callback parameter.
  (a, c) => 

  // parenthesis return! so we can safe the return and write only (..., a);
  (a[c] = testObj[c], a)

  // initial value for reduce.
  ,{}
);

Why Sorting is a bit complicated:

In short Object.keys() will return an array with the same order as we get with a normal loop:

const object1 = {
  a: 'somestring',
  b: 42,
  c: false
};

console.log(Object.keys(object1));
// expected output: Array ["a", "b", "c"]

Object.keys() returns an array whose elements are strings corresponding to the enumerable properties found directly upon object. The ordering of the properties is the same as that given by looping over the properties of the object manually.

Sidenote - you can use Object.keys() on arrays as well, keep in mind the index will be returned:

// simple array
const arr = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
console.log(Object.keys(arr)); // console: ['0', '1', '2']

But it is not as easy as shown by those examples, real world objects may contain numbers and alphabetical characters or even symbols (please don't do it).

Here is an example with all of them in one object:

// This is just to show what happens, please don't use symbols in keys.
const testObj = {
  '1asc': '4444',
  1000: 'a',
  b: '1231',
  '#01010101010': 'asd',
  2: 'c'
};

console.log(Object.keys(testObj));
// output: [ '2', '1000', '1asc', 'b', '#01010101010' ]

Now if we use Array.prototype.sort() on the array above the output changes:

console.log(Object.keys(testObj).sort());
// output: [ '#01010101010', '1000', '1asc', '2', 'b' ]

Here is a quote from the docs:

The sort() method sorts the elements of an array in place and returns the array. The sort is not necessarily stable. The default sort order is according to string Unicode code points.

The time and space complexity of the sort cannot be guaranteed as it is implementation dependent.

You have to make sure that one of them returns the desired output for you. In reallife examples people tend to mix up things expecially if you use different information inputs like APIs and Databases together.


So what's the big deal?

Well there are two articles which every programmer should understand:

In-place algorithm:

In computer science, an in-place algorithm is an algorithm which transforms input using no auxiliary data structure. However a small amount of extra storage space is allowed for auxiliary variables. The input is usually overwritten by the output as the algorithm executes. In-place algorithm updates input sequence only through replacement or swapping of elements. An algorithm which is not in-place is sometimes called not-in-place or out-of-place.

So basically our old array will be overwritten! This is important if you want to keep the old array for other reasons. So keep this in mind.

Sorting algorithm

Stable sort algorithms sort identical elements in the same order that they appear in the input. When sorting some kinds of data, only part of the data is examined when determining the sort order. For example, in the card sorting example to the right, the cards are being sorted by their rank, and their suit is being ignored. This allows the possibility of multiple different correctly sorted versions of the original list. Stable sorting algorithms choose one of these, according to the following rule: if two items compare as equal, like the two 5 cards, then their relative order will be preserved, so that if one came before the other in the input, it will also come before the other in the output.

enter image description here

An example of stable sort on playing cards. When the cards are sorted by rank with a stable sort, the two 5s must remain in the same order in the sorted output that they were originally in. When they are sorted with a non-stable sort, the 5s may end up in the opposite order in the sorted output.

This shows that the sorting is right but it changed. So in the real world even if the sorting is correct we have to make sure that we get what we expect! This is super important keep this in mind as well. For more JavaScript examples look into the Array.prototype.sort() - docs: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/sort

14
  • 10
    You flippin rock, thank you for this incredible answer. One of the best I've seen on SO. Cheers.
    – Gavin
    Oct 12, 2018 at 18:57
  • 1
    The Array.prototype.sort() documentation says it actually is stable for all modern browsers. Does it mean that result of sorting cards from example will always be same? Apr 29, 2020 at 11:19
  • 1
    @ArthurStankevich it all depends on your expectation. Yes the Array.prototype.sort() is stable. However if you have multiple sorting criteria, the problem will arise. Think about the card game, will you sort for the numbers or the symbol? Is there a way to do it for both? If you do a simple sort like: ['7hearts', '5hearts', '2hearts', '5diamonds'].sort(), the results will stay the same. If you put in your own rules (compareFunction ), you have to watch out for stability.
    – Megajin
    May 7, 2020 at 7:45
  • 1
    @Megajin this is interesting, thank you. Are you saying that sort() is unstable in case of custom compareFunction even if it is deterministic? May 10, 2020 at 10:37
  • 1
    @ArthurStankevich, it depends highly on the versions, complexity and the used types. However I can say that with the newer version of the used JavaScript Engine the outputs are stable so far. So if you have tests to determine outcomes, you can be sure that the supported version, will have the same results. The version are found at the very bottom of the MDN Documentation for: Array.prototype.sort(). Keep in mind that in the real world there are version mismatches, where you will most likely have errors even in deterministic sorts, because they behave differently in older versions.
    – Megajin
    May 14, 2020 at 7:42
83

It's 2019 and we have a 2019 way to solve this :)

Object.fromEntries(Object.entries({b: 3, a:8, c:1}).sort())
12
  • 2
    How do we sort nested objects by key? May 9, 2019 at 16:47
  • @a2441918 In the same way as you would do with the sort() function. Have a look: developer.mozilla.org/de/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… Object.fromEntries(Object.entries({b: 3, a:8, c:1}).sort((k, j) => k - j)) Oct 21, 2019 at 9:56
  • For TypeScript users this isn't available for us yet, see: github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/30933
    – tsujp
    Feb 17, 2020 at 11:06
  • 2
    @theMaxx Use a custom function for sort, something like: ``` Object.fromEntries(Object.entries({b: 3, a:8, c:1}).sort(([key1, val1], [key2, val2]) => key1.toLowerCase().localeCompare(key2.toLowerCase()))) ```
    – Ben
    Mar 23, 2020 at 16:18
  • 1
    This will sort entries by casting them to string, if our keys have , characters, the resulting order will be affected. Object.fromEntries(Object.entries({'a.': 1, 'a': 2, 'a,': 234}).sort()) - {a,: 234, a: 2, a.: 1}, at least it will be not ascii order
    – Klesun
    May 21, 2022 at 6:41
38

ES6 - here is the 1 liner

var data = { zIndex:99,
             name:'sravan',
             age:25, 
             position:'architect',
             amount:'100k',
             manager:'mammu' };

console.log(Object.entries(data).sort().reduce( (o,[k,v]) => (o[k]=v,o), {} ));

4
  • 4
    What the heck is this crazy syntax? (o[k] = v, o). Why does this even work, where can I find docs about it? It obviously returns the rightmost parameter, but why?
    – ntaso
    Jul 9, 2019 at 9:37
  • 1
    @ntaso here
    – James
    Jul 11, 2019 at 20:51
  • short function first makes o[k] equals to v and then returns o Aug 6, 2019 at 23:34
  • This solution is heavy - it converts entries arrays to string. And is not working for arbitrary keys, e.g. Object.entries({ a: 8, ['a,1']: 6 }).sort() -> [ [ 'a,1', 6 ], [ 'a', 8 ] ]
    – xmedeko
    Feb 1, 2022 at 7:51
29

This works for me

/**
 * Return an Object sorted by it's Key
 */
var sortObjectByKey = function(obj){
    var keys = [];
    var sorted_obj = {};

    for(var key in obj){
        if(obj.hasOwnProperty(key)){
            keys.push(key);
        }
    }

    // sort keys
    keys.sort();

    // create new array based on Sorted Keys
    jQuery.each(keys, function(i, key){
        sorted_obj[key] = obj[key];
    });

    return sorted_obj;
};
9
  • 10
    This is actually the correct answer to the question at hand. For a simplified version using Underscore, see: jsfiddle.net/wPjaQ/1
    – radicand
    Apr 26, 2013 at 10:30
  • 7
    @radicand No this answer is not correct. It returns a new object, which also has no order.
    – Paul
    Jul 12, 2013 at 21:50
  • 3
    @radicand It doesn't in practice either. There is no such thing as order on an objects keys, so how can you say that in practice this gives you an object in sorted order? It really just gives you back a shallow copy of the object you pass in.
    – Paul
    Jul 15, 2013 at 15:39
  • 9
    This is super wrong. It might happen to work for now, but will break in a different web browser or different page load in the same browser. Browsers may randomize object keys for security, or as you fill up an object, it will put the values into different memory buckets depending on the keys, which will return a different order. If this happens to work it's just lucky for you.
    – Yobert
    Oct 1, 2014 at 6:06
  • 16
    It also has a needless use of jQuery.
    – RobG
    Dec 1, 2014 at 7:17
24

This is an old question, but taking the cue from Mathias Bynens' answer, I've made a short version to sort the current object, without much overhead.

    Object.keys(unordered).sort().forEach(function(key) {
        var value = unordered[key];
        delete unordered[key];
        unordered[key] = value;
    });

after the code execution, the "unordered" object itself will have the keys alphabetically sorted.

1
  • 1
    Gosh oh gosh. Exactly what I was looking for. When operating on objects, I usually prefer to operate on them by reference, so the solutions that were returning new objects weren't ideal. Thanks so much for this. I owe you a coffee/tea/beer/hug in the afterlife :-P
    – onassar
    Feb 18, 2021 at 23:42
21

Suppose it could be useful in VisualStudio debugger which shows unordered object properties.

(function(s) {
    var t = {};

    Object.keys(s).sort().forEach(function(k) {
        t[k] = s[k]
    });

    return t
})({
    b: 2,
    a: 1,
    c: 3
});

The same as inline version:

(function(s){var t={};Object.keys(s).sort().forEach(function(k){t[k]=s[k]});return t})({b:2,a:1,c:3})
1
  • Nice! Thank you for this succinct solution. Nov 5, 2015 at 16:28
20

Using lodash this will work:

some_map = { 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas', 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf' }

// perform a function in order of ascending key
_(some_map).keys().sort().each(function (key) {
  var value = some_map[key];
  // do something
});

// or alternatively to build a sorted list
sorted_list = _(some_map).keys().sort().map(function (key) {
  var value = some_map[key];
  // return something that shall become an item in the sorted list
}).value();

Just food for thought.

15

I am actually very surprised that over 30 answers were given, and yet none gave a full deep solution for this problem. Some had shallow solution, while others had deep but faulty (it'll crash if undefined, function or symbol will be in the json).

Here is the full solution:

function sortObject(unordered, sortArrays = false) {
  if (!unordered || typeof unordered !== 'object') {
    return unordered;
  }

  if (Array.isArray(unordered)) {
    const newArr = unordered.map((item) => sortObject(item, sortArrays));
    if (sortArrays) {
      newArr.sort();
    }
    return newArr;
  }

  const ordered = {};
  Object.keys(unordered)
    .sort()
    .forEach((key) => {
      ordered[key] = sortObject(unordered[key], sortArrays);
    });
  return ordered;
}

const json = {
  b: 5,
  a: [2, 1],
  d: {
    b: undefined,
    a: null,
    c: false,
    d: true,
    g: '1',
    f: [],
    h: {},
    i: 1n,
    j: () => {},
    k: Symbol('a')
  },
  c: [
    {
      b: 1,
      a: 1
    }
  ]
};
console.log(sortObject(json, true));
2
  • 2
    Same thing for me! I scrolled through to find a deep solution to the problem (before posting my own answer, which was equivalent to yours). But then I saw yours, and upvoted that instead. :)
    – Venryx
    Oct 24, 2020 at 5:34
  • 1
    Your answer is a legit one. +1 Jul 11, 2022 at 11:51
9

Underscore version:

function order(unordered)
{
return _.object(_.sortBy(_.pairs(unordered),function(o){return o[0]}));
}

If you don't trust your browser for keeping the order of the keys, I strongly suggest to rely on a ordered array of key-value paired arrays.

_.sortBy(_.pairs(c),function(o){return o[0]})
1
  • 1
    Better: _.object(_.sortBy(_.pairs(unordered), _.first)) Apr 24, 2019 at 8:33
9
// if keys are char/string
const sortObject = (obj) => Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj).sort( ));
let obj = { c: 3, a: 1 };
obj = sortObject(obj)

// if keys are numbers
const sortObject = (obj) => Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj).sort( (a,b)=>a-b ));
let obj = { 3: 'c', 1: 'a' };
obj = sortObject(obj)
8
function sortObjectKeys(obj){
    return Object.keys(obj).sort().reduce((acc,key)=>{
        acc[key]=obj[key];
        return acc;
    },{});
}

sortObjectKeys({
    telephone: '069911234124',
    name: 'Lola',
    access: true,
});
2
  • Maybe adding some explanation of your code is better.
    – aristotll
    Aug 26, 2017 at 16:57
  • 1
    Gets the keys of the object, so it is array of strings, I sort() them and as it is array of strings (keys) I reduce them (with reduce() of js Array). The acc initially is an empty object {} (last arg of reducer) and the reducer (callback) assigns on the empty object the values of the source obj with the ordered key sequence. Aug 29, 2017 at 5:32
8

Maybe a bit more elegant form:

 /**
     * Sorts a key-value object by key, maintaining key to data correlations.
     * @param {Object} src  key-value object
     * @returns {Object}
     */
var ksort = function ( src ) {
      var keys = Object.keys( src ),
          target = {};
      keys.sort();
      keys.forEach(function ( key ) {
        target[ key ] = src[ key ];
      });
      return target;
    };


// Usage
console.log(ksort({
  a:1,
  c:3,
  b:2  
}));

P.S. and the same with ES6+ syntax:

function ksort( src ) {
  const keys = Object.keys( src );
  keys.sort();
  return keys.reduce(( target, key ) => {
        target[ key ] = src[ key ];
        return target;
  }, {});
};
2
  • it's sorts nothing. you still returning an object. you cannot gurantee the objects in your target is actually going to have any order. you need to return an array. jeeezus.
    – mjs
    Jan 27, 2019 at 18:58
  • the only thing you are doing here is ensuring it's a set, in a non optimal way.
    – mjs
    Jan 27, 2019 at 18:59
8

Here is a one line solution (not the most efficient but when it comes to thin objects like in your example I'd rather use native JS functions then messing up with sloppy loops)

const unordered = { 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas', 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf' }

const ordered = Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(unordered).sort())

console.log(ordered); // a->b->c

0
8

const sortObjectByKeys = (object, {desc = false} = {}) => Object.fromEntries(
  Object.entries(object).sort(([k1], [k2]) => k1 < k2 ^ desc ? -1 : 1),
)

const object = { b: 'asdsad', c: 'masdas', a: 'dsfdsfsdf' }

const orderedObject    = sortObjectByKeys(object)
const orderedObjectRev = sortObjectByKeys(object, {desc: true})

console.log({orderedObject, orderedObjectRev})

Or use tiny objectools package:

import o from 'objectools'

o({b: 1, a: 2, c: 3}).sort() // --> {a: 2, b: 1, c: 3}
1
  • 1
    Simply beautiful!
    – 1antares1
    Sep 28, 2022 at 0:49
6

recursive sort, for nested object and arrays

function sortObjectKeys(obj){
    return Object.keys(obj).sort().reduce((acc,key)=>{
        if (Array.isArray(obj[key])){
            acc[key]=obj[key].map(sortObjectKeys);
        }
        if (typeof obj[key] === 'object'){
            acc[key]=sortObjectKeys(obj[key]);
        }
        else{
            acc[key]=obj[key];
        }
        return acc;
    },{});
}

// test it
sortObjectKeys({
    telephone: '069911234124',
    name: 'Lola',
    access: true,
    cars: [
        {name: 'Family', brand: 'Volvo', cc:1600},
        {
            name: 'City', brand: 'VW', cc:1200, 
            interior: {
                wheel: 'plastic',
                radio: 'blaupunkt'
            }
        },
        {
            cc:2600, name: 'Killer', brand: 'Plymouth',
            interior: {
                wheel: 'wooden',
                radio: 'earache!'
            }
        },
    ]
});
5
  • I think you need an else in there -- could be true for both Array.isArray(obj[key]) and for typeof obj[key] === 'object'
    – tadasajon
    Apr 26, 2018 at 6:44
  • When you have an array of primitives, your function transforms the primitives (string/number) to empty objects. To catch this I added the following right at the beginning of your function: function sortObjectKeys(obj){: if(typeof obj != 'object'){ /* it is a primitive: number/string (in an array) */ return obj; }. For robustness I at the complete start also added: if(obj == null || obj == undefined){ return obj; }
    – isgoed
    Feb 26, 2019 at 14:16
  • var sortKeys = (unordered) => { function srt(obj){ const isAr = Array.isArray(obj) return !isAr && typeof obj === 'object' ? Object.keys(obj).sort().reduce((a,k)=>{ let vl = obj[k] let isArr = Array.isArray(vl) if (isArr) vl = vl.map(srt) if (vl && typeof vl === 'object' && !isArr) a[k]=srt(vl) else a[k]=vl return a; },{}) : (isAr ? obj.map(srt) : obj); } console.log(JSON.stringify(srt(unordered), null, 4)) } Aug 26, 2020 at 12:33
  • Above can help to preserve array, as well in your solution, array is getting converted to array-like object Aug 26, 2020 at 12:35
  • This solution can convert arrays to objects in some cases. (eg. array within an array)
    – Venryx
    Oct 24, 2020 at 5:26
5

Here is a clean lodash-based version that works with nested objects

/**
 * Sort of the keys of an object alphabetically
 */
const sortKeys = function(obj) {
  if(_.isArray(obj)) {
    return obj.map(sortKeys);
  }
  if(_.isObject(obj)) {
    return _.fromPairs(_.keys(obj).sort().map(key => [key, sortKeys(obj[key])]));
  }
  return obj;
};

It would be even cleaner if lodash had a toObject() method...

5

There's a great project by @sindresorhus called sort-keys that works awesome.

You can check its source code here:

https://github.com/sindresorhus/sort-keys

Or you can use it with npm:

$ npm install --save sort-keys

Here are also code examples from his readme

const sortKeys = require('sort-keys');

sortKeys({c: 0, a: 0, b: 0});
//=> {a: 0, b: 0, c: 0}

sortKeys({b: {b: 0, a: 0}, a: 0}, {deep: true});
//=> {a: 0, b: {a: 0, b: 0}}

sortKeys({c: 0, a: 0, b: 0}, {
    compare: (a, b) => -a.localeCompare(b)
});
//=> {c: 0, b: 0, a: 0}
5
Object.keys(unordered).sort().reduce(
    (acc,curr) => ({...acc, [curr]:unordered[curr]})
    , {}
)
2
  • 1
    This could fit on one-line here on SO if you didn't break it for clarity, and for a one-liner in a sea of loops, this deserves more credit. Nice use of the spread operator to merge, I've always done it the same way, but assigned and then returned, so have learned something with solution :) Jun 15, 2020 at 21:23
  • How can I remove the error in typescript: Element implicitly has an 'any' type because expression of type 'string' can't be used to index type '..
    – Timo
    Sep 30, 2022 at 20:24
5

This works as of Jan 2023

var obj = {
'b':'cVal',
'a':'aVal',
'c':'bVal'
}
console.log(JSON.stringify(obj))
obj = Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(obj).sort())
console.log(JSON.stringify(obj));

4

Use this code if you have nested objects or if you have nested array obj.

var sortObjectByKey = function(obj){
    var keys = [];
    var sorted_obj = {};
    for(var key in obj){
        if(obj.hasOwnProperty(key)){
            keys.push(key);
        }
    }
    // sort keys
    keys.sort();

    // create new array based on Sorted Keys
    jQuery.each(keys, function(i, key){
        var val = obj[key];
        if(val instanceof Array){
            //do for loop;
            var arr = [];
            jQuery.each(val,function(){
                arr.push(sortObjectByKey(this));
            }); 
            val = arr;

        }else if(val instanceof Object){
            val = sortObjectByKey(val)
        }
        sorted_obj[key] = val;
    });
    return sorted_obj;
};
2
  • 6
    The author doesn't state say that he is using jQuery, nor is the question tagged jQuery. It would be nice if you addes a solution in pure javascript.
    – rusmus
    Feb 25, 2014 at 14:53
  • Thanks @Phani this is exactly what I needed Mar 18, 2016 at 14:47
4

As already mentioned, objects are unordered.

However...

You may find this idiom useful:

var o = { 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas', 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf' };

var kv = [];

for (var k in o) {
  kv.push([k, o[k]]);
}

kv.sort()

You can then iterate through kv and do whatever you wish.

> kv.sort()
[ [ 'a', 'dsfdsfsdf' ],
  [ 'b', 'asdsad' ],
  [ 'c', 'masdas' ] ]
1
3

Just use lodash to unzip map and sortBy first value of pair and zip again it will return sorted key.

If you want sortby value change pair index to 1 instead of 0

var o = { 'b' : 'asdsad', 'c' : 'masdas', 'a' : 'dsfdsfsdf' };
console.log(_(o).toPairs().sortBy(0).fromPairs().value())

enter image description here

1
  • Please use the edit link explain how this code works and don't just give the code, as an explanation is more likely to help future readers. See also How to Answer. source
    – Jed Fox
    Jan 10, 2017 at 23:40
3

Sorts keys recursively while preserving references.

function sortKeys(o){
    if(o && o.constructor === Array)
        o.forEach(i=>sortKeys(i));
    else if(o && o.constructor === Object)
        Object.entries(o).sort((a,b)=>a[0]>b[0]?1:-1).forEach(e=>{
            sortKeys(e[1]);
            delete o[e[0]];
            o[e[0]] = e[1];
        });
}

Example:

let x = {d:3, c:{g:20, a:[3,2,{s:200, a:100}]}, a:1};
let y = x.c;
let z = x.c.a[2];
sortKeys(x);
console.log(x); // {a: 1, c: {a: [3, 2, {a: 1, s: 2}], g: 2}, d: 3}
console.log(y); // {a: [3, 2, {a: 100, s: 200}}, g: 20}
console.log(z); // {a: 100, s: 200}
4
  • Nice snippet! What's the purpose of delete o[e[0]]; there? Can't we just assign?
    – Boyang
    Oct 19, 2018 at 4:11
  • It seems like only new assignments to non existent keys will append the key at the end. If delete is commented out, keys wont be sorted, at least not in Chrome.
    – brunettdan
    Oct 20, 2018 at 8:51
  • that makes sense. Thanks! In any case, this is sort of a lost cause because js object keys have no sequence, according to the specs. We are just exploiting obj and log function impl details
    – Boyang
    Oct 23, 2018 at 9:21
  • Yea, I use the Map when order of keys are important: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
    – brunettdan
    Oct 24, 2018 at 11:21
3

This is a lightweight solution to everything I need for JSON sorting.

function sortObj(obj) {
    if (typeof obj !== "object" || obj === null)
        return obj;

    if (Array.isArray(obj))
        return obj.map((e) => sortObj(e)).sort();

    return Object.keys(obj).sort().reduce((sorted, k) => {
        sorted[k] = sortObj(obj[k]);
        return sorted;
    }, {});
}
1
  • Caution: This sorts not just keys, but also array items!
    – Venryx
    Oct 24, 2020 at 5:27
2

Solution:

function getSortedObject(object) {
  var sortedObject = {};

  var keys = Object.keys(object);
  keys.sort();

  for (var i = 0, size = keys.length; i < size; i++) {
    key = keys[i];
    value = object[key];
    sortedObject[key] = value;
  }

  return sortedObject;
}

// Test run
getSortedObject({d: 4, a: 1, b: 2, c: 3});

Explanation:

Many JavaScript runtimes store values inside an object in the order in which they are added.

To sort the properties of an object by their keys you can make use of the Object.keys function which will return an array of keys. The array of keys can then be sorted by the Array.prototype.sort() method which sorts the elements of an array in place (no need to assign them to a new variable).

Once the keys are sorted you can start using them one-by-one to access the contents of the old object to fill a new object (which is now sorted).

Below is an example of the procedure (you can test it in your targeted browsers):

/**
 * Returns a copy of an object, which is ordered by the keys of the original object.
 *
 * @param {Object} object - The original object.
 * @returns {Object} Copy of the original object sorted by keys.
 */
function getSortedObject(object) {
  // New object which will be returned with sorted keys
  var sortedObject = {};

  // Get array of keys from the old/current object
  var keys = Object.keys(object);
  // Sort keys (in place)
  keys.sort();

  // Use sorted keys to copy values from old object to the new one
  for (var i = 0, size = keys.length; i < size; i++) {
    key = keys[i];
    value = object[key];
    sortedObject[key] = value;
  }

  // Return the new object
  return sortedObject;
}

/**
 * Test run
 */
var unsortedObject = {
  d: 4,
  a: 1,
  b: 2,
  c: 3
};

var sortedObject = getSortedObject(unsortedObject);

for (var key in sortedObject) {
  var text = "Key: " + key + ", Value: " + sortedObject[key];
  var paragraph = document.createElement('p');
  paragraph.textContent = text;
  document.body.appendChild(paragraph);
}

Note: Object.keys is an ECMAScript 5.1 method but here is a polyfill for older browsers:

if (!Object.keys) {
  Object.keys = function (object) {
    var key = [];
    var property = undefined;
    for (property in object) {
      if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(object, property)) {
        key.push(property);
      }
    }
    return key;
  };
}
2

I transfered some Java enums to javascript objects.

These objects returned correct arrays for me. if object keys are mixed type (string, int, char), there is a problem.

var Helper = {
    isEmpty: function (obj) {
        return !obj || obj === null || obj === undefined || Array.isArray(obj) && obj.length === 0;
    },

    isObject: function (obj) {
        return (typeof obj === 'object');
    },

    sortObjectKeys: function (object) {
        return Object.keys(object)
            .sort(function (a, b) {
                c = a - b;
                return c
            });
    },
    containsItem: function (arr, item) {
        if (arr && Array.isArray(arr)) {
            return arr.indexOf(item) > -1;
        } else {
            return arr === item;
        }
    },

    pushArray: function (arr1, arr2) {
        if (arr1 && arr2 && Array.isArray(arr1)) {
            arr1.push.apply(arr1, Array.isArray(arr2) ? arr2 : [arr2]);
        }
    }
};

function TypeHelper() {
    var _types = arguments[0],
        _defTypeIndex = 0,
        _currentType,
        _value;

    if (arguments.length == 2) {
        _defTypeIndex = arguments[1];
    }

    Object.defineProperties(this, {
        Key: {
            get: function () {
                return _currentType;
            },
            set: function (val) {
                _currentType.setType(val, true);
            },
            enumerable: true
        },
        Value: {
            get: function () {
                return _types[_currentType];
            },
            set: function (val) {
                _value.setType(val, false);
            },
            enumerable: true
        }
    });

    this.getAsList = function (keys) {
        var list = [];
        Helper.sortObjectKeys(_types).forEach(function (key, idx, array) {
            if (key && _types[key]) {

                if (!Helper.isEmpty(keys) && Helper.containsItem(keys, key) || Helper.isEmpty(keys)) {
                    var json = {};
                    json.Key = key;
                    json.Value = _types[key];
                    Helper.pushArray(list, json);
                }
            }
        });
        return list;
    };

    this.setType = function (value, isKey) {
        if (!Helper.isEmpty(value)) {
            Object.keys(_types).forEach(function (key, idx, array) {
                if (Helper.isObject(value)) {
                    if (value && value.Key == key) {
                        _currentType = key;
                    }
                } else if (isKey) {
                    if (value && value.toString() == key.toString()) {
                        _currentType = key;
                    }
                } else if (value && value.toString() == _types[key]) {
                    _currentType = key;
                }
            });
        } else {
            this.setDefaultType();
        }
        return isKey ? _types[_currentType] : _currentType;
    };

    this.setTypeByIndex = function (index) {
        var keys = Helper.sortObjectKeys(_types);
        for (var i = 0; i < keys.length; i++) {
            if (index === i) {
                _currentType = keys[index];
                break;
            }
        }
    };

    this.setDefaultType = function () {
        this.setTypeByIndex(_defTypeIndex);
    };

    this.setDefaultType();
}


var TypeA = {
    "-1": "Any",
    "2": "2L",
    "100": "100L",
    "200": "200L",
    "1000": "1000L"
};

var TypeB = {
    "U": "Any",
    "W": "1L",
    "V": "2L",
    "A": "100L",
    "Z": "200L",
    "K": "1000L"
};
console.log('keys of TypeA', Helper.sortObjectKeys(TypeA));//keys of TypeA ["-1", "2", "100", "200", "1000"]

console.log('keys of TypeB', Helper.sortObjectKeys(TypeB));//keys of TypeB ["U", "W", "V", "A", "Z", "K"]

var objectTypeA = new TypeHelper(TypeA),
    objectTypeB = new TypeHelper(TypeB);

console.log('list of objectA = ', objectTypeA.getAsList());
console.log('list of objectB = ', objectTypeB.getAsList());

Types:

var TypeA = {
    "-1": "Any",
    "2": "2L",
    "100": "100L",
    "200": "200L",
    "1000": "1000L"
};

var TypeB = {
    "U": "Any",
    "W": "1L",
    "V": "2L",
    "A": "100L",
    "Z": "200L",
    "K": "1000L"
};


Sorted Keys(output):

Key list of TypeA -> ["-1", "2", "100", "200", "1000"]

Key list of TypeB -> ["U", "W", "V", "A", "Z", "K"]
2

Simple and readable snippet, using lodash.

You need to put the key in quotes only when calling sortBy. It doesn't have to be in quotes in the data itself.

_.sortBy(myObj, "key")

Also, your second parameter to map is wrong. It should be a function, but using pluck is easier.

_.map( _.sortBy(myObj, "key") , "value");
1
  • _.sortBy(myObj, "key") will sort the collection by a key belonging to the collection items (I.e. myObj.item.key) rather than the myObj itself (myObj.item where 'item' is an object).
    – matharden
    Jun 25, 2020 at 11:29

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