36

I want to convert an array of objects to object with key value pairs in javascript.

var arr=[{"name1":"value1"},{"name2":"value2"},...}];

How can i convert it to an object such as

{"name1":"value1","name2":"value2",...}

I want it to be supported in majority of browsers.

0

7 Answers 7

77

You could use Object.assign and a spread syntax ... for creating a single object with the given array with objects.

var array = [{ name1: "value1" }, { name2: "value2" }],
    object = Object.assign({}, ...array);
    
console.log(object);

1
  • There are a few good uses for Object.assign even with object spread being available, and this is one of them. May 15, 2022 at 19:54
7

You could run a reduce over the array and return a new object. But it is important to remember that if properties are the same they will be overwritten.

const newObject = array.reduce((current, next) => {
  return { ...current, ...next};
}, {})

If you are using es5 and not es6:

var newObject = array.reduce(function(current, next){
  return Object.assign({}, current, next);
}, {})
1
  • This is very inefficient (quadratic time, lots of intermediate objects), which can be fixed by using Object.assign(current, next) instead of Object.assign({}, current, next).
    – Ry-
    Oct 1, 2021 at 19:48
5

With modern JS (YMMV):

  1. Split each object into entries
  2. Aggregate all entries into one object

const arr = [{name1:"value1"}, {name2:"value2"}, {a:1,b:2}];
const obj = Object.fromEntries(arr.flatMap(Object.entries));
console.log(obj);

1
  • Object.fromEntries and Array::flatMap are both slow Oct 2, 2023 at 19:33
3

Try this simple logic

var arr=[{"name1":"value1"},{"name2":"value2"}];
var obj = {}; //create the empty output object
arr.forEach( function(item){ 
   var key = Object.keys(item)[0]; //take the first key from every object in the array
   obj[ key ] = item [ key ];  //assign the key and value to output obj
});
console.log( obj );

1
  • For short arrays and ES5 env, this seems the most readable/simple way
    – Andy B
    Sep 21, 2018 at 13:49
3

use with Array#forEach and Object.keys

var arr = [{"name1": "value1"},{"name2": "value2"}];
var obj = {};
arr.map(k => Object.keys(k).forEach(a => obj[a] = k[a]))
console.log(obj)

2
  • 1
    A map method returns a new array, however this function is just being used to mutate var obj so a forEach is more appropriate.
    – Benji Lees
    Apr 26, 2017 at 6:08
  • Object.keys(k).forEach(a => obj[a] = k[a]) is a slower, less readable, and less compatible version of Object.assign(obj, k).
    – Ry-
    Oct 1, 2021 at 19:52
-1

Using for...in loop :

var arr=[{"name1":"value1"},{"name2":"value2"}];

var obj = {};
for (var i in arr) {
  obj[Object.keys(arr[i])] = arr[i][Object.keys(arr[i])];
}

console.log(obj);

Using Array.map() method with ES6 :

var arr=[{"name1":"value1"},{"name2":"value2"}];

var obj = {};

arr.map(item => obj[Object.keys(item)] = item[Object.keys(item)]);

console.log(obj);

Using Object.assign() method with ES6 spreaqd(...) assignment :

let arr=[{"name1":"value1"},{"name2":"value2"}];

let obj = Object.assign({}, ...arr);

console.log(obj);

-1

Supposing that you have myObject and myArray

myObject = {};
myArray = [
    {itemOneKey: 'itemOneValue', itemTwoKey: 'itemTwoValue'},
    {itemThreeKey: 'itemThreeValue'}
];

simply try this:

myArray.map(obj => {
  Object.keys(obj).map(key => myObject[key] = obj[key])
});

const myObject = {};
const myArray = [
    {itemOneKey: 'itemOneValue', itemTwoKey: 'itemTwoValue'},
    {itemThreeKey: 'itemThreeValue'}
];

myArray.map(obj => {
  Object.keys(obj).map(key => myObject[key] = obj[key])
});

console.log(myObject);

2
  • Object.keys(obj).map(key => myObject[key] = obj[key]) is a slower, less readable, and less compatible version of Object.assign(myObject, obj).
    – Ry-
    Feb 23, 2023 at 5:55
  • Who told you? Show me where it is said in the specification
    – underflow
    Feb 23, 2023 at 8:22

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