23

Let's say I start with this:

var shippingAddresses = [
    {
      "firstname": "Kevin",
      "lastname": "Borders",
      "address1": "2201 N Pershing Dr",
      "address2": "Apt 417",
      "city": "Arlington",
      "state": "VA",
      "zip": "22201",
      "country": "US"
    }, 
    {
      "firstname": "Dan",
      "lastname": "Hess",
      "address1": "304 Riversedge Dr",
      "address2": "",
      "city": "Saline",
      "state": "MI",
      "zip": "48176",
      "country": "US"
    }
]

I use this to prepopulate a form.
Users can edit entries or add new ones. I need to prevent them from adding duplicates.

The issue is that the structure of the form that I am serializing and the order in which these values are returned from the database are not the same, so there is a chance that I will insert an item into this array with the following format:

{
  "country": "US",
  "firstname": "Kevin",
  "lastname": "Borders",
  "address1": "2201 N Pershing Dr",
  "address2": "Apt 417",
  "zip": "22201",                                    
  "city": "Arlington",
  "state": "VA"
}

Which is the same as the first entry, just ordered differently.

I am loading underscorejs, so if there's a way to handle it with that library, that would be great. I'm also using jQuery if that helps.

At this point, I'm not sure how to proceed.

5
  • Do you need to sort properties of objects with _?
    – YD1m
    Jun 27, 2013 at 18:16
  • I don't need to sort the properties, no. I'm specifically trying to do this in a way that the order of the properties is irrelevant.
    – S16
    Jun 27, 2013 at 18:21
  • Are you really comparing the serialized JSON strings against each other or why do you think the order matters? Show us the code you're using to prevent duplicates
    – Bergi
    Jun 27, 2013 at 18:29
  • I'm not preventing duplicates right now, that's why I posted this question.
    – S16
    Jun 27, 2013 at 18:37
  • ok, the new edit to my answer should work now with objects of variable property positioning. Jun 27, 2013 at 18:46

7 Answers 7

31

The Underscore findWhere function does exactly what you need - it's not an indexOf search by object identity, but searches objects whose properties have the same values as the input.

if (_.findWhere(shippingAddresses, toBeInserted) == null) {
    shippingAddresses.push(toBeInserted);
}
3
  • I think this is the best way to go. Especially considering that you've got underscore. I could refactor my code to work without underscore, but this one is the way to do. Jun 27, 2013 at 23:36
  • 2
    This code behaves correctly thanks to lenient comparison == but _.findWhere has to be tested against undefined and not null (as per underscore.js docs). May 29, 2014 at 16:58
  • 2
    @physiocoder: Just what I intended :-) Of course you can also use === undefined if you like that better.
    – Bergi
    May 29, 2014 at 16:59
18

Basic example using lodash union method:

var a = [1,2,3];

// try to add "1" and "4" to the above Array
a = _.union(a, [1, 4]);

console.log(a);
<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lodash.js/4.13.1/lodash.min.js"></script>

While this doesn't directly answers the question, it does answers the broader question of how to add unique values to an Array, and like myself, others might stumble upon this page from google.

5

based on this answer to: "js-remove-an-array-element-by-index-in-javascript"

https://stackoverflow.com/a/7142909/886092

I'm using the following idiom that is concise and does not require underscore.js or any other framework.

Here is an example for recording selected and deselected rows for DataTables jquery plugin. I keep an array of currently selected ids, and I don't want to end up with duplicates in the array:

in coffeescript

  fnRowSelected: (nodes) ->
    position = $selected.indexOf(nodes[0].id)
    unless ~position
      $selected.push nodes[0].id
    return
  fnRowDeselected: (nodes) ->
    position = $selected.indexOf(nodes[0].id)
    if ~position
      $selected.splice(position, 1)

More generally it would

position = myArray.indexOf(myval)
unless ~position
  myArray.push myVal

or in JS

var position;

position = myArray.indexOf(myval);

if (!~position) {
  myArray.push(myVal);
}
1
  • 3
    perhaps you might garner more upvotes if you answered in JS instead of coffeescript, since the question clearly asked about doing it in JS :) Jun 6, 2015 at 8:40
1

If you want to check the user input object you could try this function:

var uniqueInput = {
                       "country": "UK",
                       "firstname": "Calvin",
                       "lastname": "Borders",
                       "address1": "2201 N Pershing Dr",
                       "address2": "Apt 417",
                       "city": "Arlington",
                       "state": "VA",
                       "zip": "22201"

                        };

var duplicatedInput = {
                       "country": "US",
                       "firstname": "Kevin",
                       "lastname": "Borders",
                       "address1": "2201 N Pershing Dr",
                       "address2": "Apt 417",
                       "city": "Arlington",
                       "state": "VA",
                       "zip": "22201"

                        };

var shippingAddresses = [{
                       "firstname": "Kevin",
                       "lastname": "Borders",
                       "address1": "2201 N Pershing Dr",
                       "address2": "Apt 417",
                       "city": "Arlington",
                       "state": "VA",
                       "zip": "22201",
                       "country": "US"
                        }, {
                            "firstname": "Dan",
                            "lastname": "Hess",
                            "address1": "304 Riversedge Dr",
                            "address2": "",
                            "city": "Saline",
                            "state": "MI",
                            "zip": "48176",
                            "country": "US"
                        }];

function checkDuplication(checkTarget,source){
    _.each(source,function(obj){
        if(_.isEqual(checkTarget,obj)){ 
            alert("duplicated");
        }
    });
}

And try to invoke this check function in different parameter (uniqueInput and duplicatedInput) I think it could check the duplication input in your shipping addresses.

checkDuplication(uniqueInput,shippingAddresses);
checkDuplication(duplicatedInput,shippingAddresses);

I make a jsfiddle. You could try it. Hope this is helpful for you.

1

EDIT, this will work with your example of unsorted properties:

var normalized_array = _.map(shippingAddresses, function(a){ 
      var o = {}; 
      _.each(Object.keys(shippingAddresses[0]), function(x){o[x] = a[x]});
      return o;
})
var stringy_array = _.map(normalized_array, JSON.stringify);
shippingAddresses = _.map(_.uniq(stringy_array), JSON.parse});

and we could do this with a one-liner but it would be super ugly:

shippingAddresses_uniq = _.map(_.uniq(_.map(_.map(shippingAddresses, function(a){ var o = {}; _.each(Object.keys(shippingAddresses[0]), function(x){o[x] = a[x]}); return o; }), JSON.stringify)), JSON.parse});
3
  • And this will work for duplicates, even if the order of properties is different?
    – S16
    Jun 27, 2013 at 18:24
  • actually it seems it wont if the order of properties is different. one moment let me fix that. Jun 27, 2013 at 18:30
  • …but is really ugly. Btw, you should just use _.map(…, JSON.parse) instead of those unnecessary wrappers
    – Bergi
    Jun 27, 2013 at 19:05
1

I think you need this,

NOTE: No library is required.

let array = [{ id: 1}, {id: 2}, {id: 3}];

function addUniqeObj(data) {
  let index = -1;

  for(let i = 0, i < array.length; i++) {
    if(array[i].id === data.id) {
      index = i;
    }
  }

  if(index > -1) {
    array[index] = data;
  } else {
    array.push(data)
  }

}
-1

Basic example using Set() from ECMAScript 2015 (no library required)

The Set object lets you store unique values of any type (whether primitive values or object references). If an iterable object is passed, all of its elements will be added to the new Set. Here I'll just add one value:

// original array with duplicates already present
const numbers = [1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 100]

// Use Set to remove duplicate elements from the array 
// and keep your new addition from causing a duplicate.

// New value (100) is not added since it exists (and array 
// also is de-duped)
console.log(Array.from(new Set([...numbers, 100])))
// [1, 2, 3, 100]

// New, non-existing value (101) is added (and array is de-duped)
console.log(Array.from(new Set([...numbers, 101])))
// [1, 2, 3, 100, 101]

2
  • 3
    The question is specifically asking for objects, not integers. When performing addition to a Set, it will still consider every new object added as unique because of its reference. Apr 9, 2020 at 12:02
  • also downvoting because question ask for object...
    – pjdupreez
    Feb 3, 2022 at 16:56

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