1

I have the following JSON structure (an array that contains arrays where each array holds a dict element) that I receive from a function based view and I want to iterate through all the elements and discard those that are arrays with empty dictionaries.

data.table_values = [[{'id': 1021972,'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.94', 
'User': 'John P.', 'Open_date':'2017-08-04 01:34:18','End_date':'2017-09-05 00:29:01', 
'Ticket_status':'Transferred'},{'id': 1036722, 'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.01', 
'User': 'John P.', 'Open_date':'2017-09-01 00:34:18',
'End_date':'', 'Ticket_status':'Researching'},{'id': 1015621, 
'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.11', 'User': 'John D.','Open_date':'2017-01-01 00:00:18',
'End_date':'2017-09-01 20:20:57','Ticket_status':'Closed'}],
[{}],
[{}],
[{'id': 1045971,'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.23', 
'User': 'John C.', 'Open_date':'2016-05-01 02:32:18','End_date':'2017-09-05 12:29:01', 
'Ticket_status':'Transferred'},{'id': 1035522, 'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.02', 
'User': 'John C.', 'Open_date':'2015-08-01 00:34:18',
'End_date':'', 'Ticket_status':'Researching'},{'id': 1223621, 
'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.11', 'User': 'John C.','Open_date':'2016-01-01 00:00:18',
'End_date':'2017-09-02 21:20:57','Ticket_status':'Closed'}]]

I know how to iterate through the all values of one array element but I do not know how to iterate through all the values of all the arrays.

//iterate through all the values of one array element 

<script>
    //select the first list element
   //data.table_values is the variable that receives the JSON 
    var table_values = data.table_values[0]
    setTable()

    function setTable(){
    var tbody = $('#reservations tbody'),
    //iterate through the elements of list 0
    props = ["id", "User", "Open_date", "Ticket_status", "End_date"];
    $.each(table_values, function(i, value) {
        var tr = $('<tr>');
        $.each(props, function(i, prop) {
            $('<td>').html(value[prop]).appendTo(tr);
        });
        tbody.append(tr);
    });

    $(document).ready(function(){
    $('#reservations').DataTable();
    });
  }
</script>

<html>
<table id="reservations" style="width:100%">
<thead>
<tr>
   <th>ID</th>
   <th>User</th>
   <th>Open Date</th>
   <th>Ticket Status</th>
   <th>End Date</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
</tbody>
</table>
</html>

How can I iterate through all the arrays and discard those that contain arrays with empty dicts?

Feel free to use this JS Fiddle that I prepared, so you can do some tests.

2
  • empty dicts - what does this mean?
    – Aydin4ik
    Sep 6, 2017 at 1:46
  • no elements, just a {} with no elements
    – abautista
    Sep 6, 2017 at 1:47

2 Answers 2

1
  1. Flatten your Array of records.
  2. Filter out any elements which do not have an "id".

I have modified your fiddle by adding a map and filter statement to accomplish 1 and 2: http://jsfiddle.net/8a6858b6/1/

Is flattening a sufficient strategy, or are you trying to preserve the Array structure of your table data?

2
  • Doing the Flatten of Array records can make the trick that I want.
    – abautista
    Sep 6, 2017 at 2:00
  • I implemented your solution but I received no data.
    – abautista
    Sep 6, 2017 at 2:44
1

You would like to iterate through the data.table_values array and test each element to see if it is blank - if it is, then skip the iteration.

var data = {}; // Assuming that you have data declared before - 
               // I just need this one here to make the snippet work
data.table_values = [
[{
	'id': 1021972,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.94',
	'User': 'John P.',
	'Open_date': '2017-08-04 01:34:18',
	'End_date': '2017-09-05 00:29:01',
	'Ticket_status': 'Transferred'
}, {
	'id': 1036722,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.01',
	'User': 'John P.',
	'Open_date': '2017-09-01 00:34:18',
	'End_date': '',
	'Ticket_status': 'Researching'
}, {
	'id': 1015621,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.11',
	'User': 'John D.',
	'Open_date': '2017-01-01 00:00:18',
	'End_date': '2017-09-01 20:20:57',
	'Ticket_status': 'Closed'
}], [{}], [{}], [{
	'id': 1045971,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.23',
	'User': 'John C.',
	'Open_date': '2016-05-01 02:32:18',
	'End_date': '2017-09-05 12:29:01',
	'Ticket_status': 'Transferred'
}, {
	'id': 1035522,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.02',
	'User': 'John C.',
	'Open_date': '2015-08-01 00:34:18',
	'End_date': '',
	'Ticket_status': 'Researching'
}, {
	'id': 1223621,
	'Aging_Un_investigated_Issue': '0.11',
	'User': 'John C.',
	'Open_date': '2016-01-01 00:00:18',
	'End_date': '2017-09-02 21:20:57',
	'Ticket_status': 'Closed'
}]
];

for(table_values of data.table_values) {
    if( table_values.length == 0 ) continue;
    setTable();
}

function setTable(){
    var tbody = $('#reservations').find('tbody'),
    //iterate through the elements of list 0
    props = ["id", "User", "Open_date", "Ticket_status", "End_date"];
    $.each(table_values, function(i, value) {
       var tr = $('<tr>');
        $.each(props, function(i, prop) {
            $('<td>').html(value[prop]).appendTo(tr);
        });
        tbody.append(tr);
    });
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<table id="reservations" style="width:100%">
<thead>
<tr>
   <th>ID</th>
   <th>User</th>
   <th>Open Date</th>
   <th>Ticket Status</th>
   <th>End Date</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
</tbody>
</table>

8
  • You shouldn't do == {} - In JavaScript {} is a new object every time, so it'll always fail. Since table_values is an array, a much easier solution is to just test it's length: table_values.length > 0. I've proposed an edit to the question to reflect this. Sep 6, 2017 at 1:50
  • So, what can we do to avoid using == {}?
    – abautista
    Sep 6, 2017 at 1:51
  • @AlejandroBautistaRamos @Aydin If you ever need to do == {} you can use JSON.stringify on both sides first as a quick and dirty method. See this q/a for more elegant ways: stackoverflow.com/questions/679915 Sep 6, 2017 at 1:53
  • When doing jQuery selectors that involve ids, it's always more efficient to do the id selector first, and call .find() on the results: $('#reservations').find('tbody') instead of $('#reservations tbody'), since for ids jQuery just uses the native getElementById method. Sep 6, 2017 at 2:00
  • Plus there is no reason to have the setTable() function within the for loop - just fixed it. I was just trying to point out how to iterate through the array, not providing an overall code improvement review :)
    – Aydin4ik
    Sep 6, 2017 at 2:16

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