0

I'm trying to create a map structure to fill it dynamically with information from different sources:

export class VideoDataMap {
    [videoId: string]: {
        url: string,
        name: string
    };
}

The problem is that when i assign data to the object attributes, it says the object is undefined. If I assign a string and not the object, it works. Anyone knows what i am missing here?

  public videoDataMap = new VideoDataMap();

This does not throw an error (but we are not using the object attributes)

  this.videoDataMap[videoId] = url;      

This throws an error

   this.videoDataMap[videoId].url = url;  

   error: TypeError: Cannot set property 'url' of undefined

Thank you very much Best regards

2 Answers 2

2

How 'bout this

if (this.videoDataMap[videoId]) // check if there's an object
    this.videoDataMap[videoId]["url"] = url; // only assign this field
else // is unassigned
    this.videoDataMap[videoId] = {url : url}; // initialize new object  
3
  • thanks, the problem is that then i loose the other attributes of the object (name). i want to asign them separately.
    – Mossito
    Jul 19, 2017 at 13:54
  • Thank you, that actually worked but i needed to include all the atttributes in the initizalization: this.videoDataMap[videoId] = {url : url, name:""}
    – Mossito
    Jul 19, 2017 at 14:08
  • you can add new fields with the bracket notation like this obj['field'] = 'value', so you dont need to add empty values when creating it the first time
    – LLL
    Jul 19, 2017 at 14:13
1

I think the confusion comes because you've defined a Typescript class with structure, but not real fields. That is, the after constructed, you'll get a Javascript empty object, which makes complete sense as initially it's a map with no keys set.

It's easy to see looking into the transpiled code (for example using http://www.typescriptlang.org/play/)

Typescript:

export class VideoDataMap {
    [videoId: string]: {
        url: string,
        name: string
    };
}

Generated Javascript:

var VideoDataMap = (function () {
    function VideoDataMap() {
    }
    return VideoDataMap;
}());
exports.VideoDataMap = VideoDataMap;

Which means, when you do:

let videoDataMap = new VideoDataMap();

You'll get something similar to:

var videoDataMap = {}

And hence when you do videoDataMap["myVideoId1"].anyProp, you'll get the TypeError because videoDataMap["myVideoId1"] hasn't been initialized.

An alternative would be defining it like:

class VideoDataItem{
    public url: string;
    public name: string;
    constructor(u: string, n: string){
        this.url = u;
        this.name = n;
    }
}

class VideoDataMap {
    [videoId: string]: VideoDataItem;
}

And using it like in the following running example: https://glot.io/snippets/ervh3vtbg9

I hope it helps.

1
  • Thank you very much! It works very well, very nice explanation.
    – Mossito
    Jul 19, 2017 at 15:17

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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