71

I have an array model, as below:

records:[{
    "empid":1,
    "fname": "X",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":2,
    "fname": "A",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":3,
    "fname": "B",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":4,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":5,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
}
]

Now I have an array of empid's [1,4,5].

So now, I need to filter the first array, which contains all the keys in my second.

Output:

records:[{
    "empid":1,
    "fname": "X",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":4,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":5,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
}
]

I can do this using a forEach loop in angular, but as I have more than 100 records in my model object, I need a way to handle this in a much cleaner way.

I'm thinking of creating a custom filter, but what is your take on it? (If yes, please provide sample code to achieve this).

4

8 Answers 8

95

You can do it with Array.prototype.filter(),

var data = { records : [{ "empid": 1, "fname": "X", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 2, "fname": "A", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 3, "fname": "B", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 4, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 5, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }] }
var empIds = [1,4,5]
var filteredArray = data.records.filter(function(itm){
  return empIds.indexOf(itm.empid) > -1;
});

filteredArray = { records : filteredArray };

If​ the ​callBack​ returns a ​true​ value, then the ​itm​ passed to that particular callBack will be filtered out. You can read more about it here.​​​​​​

3
68

In 2019 using ES6:

const ids = [1, 4, 5],
  data = {
    records: [{
      "empid": 1,
      "fname": "X",
      "lname": "Y"
    }, {
      "empid": 2,
      "fname": "A",
      "lname": "Y"
    }, {
      "empid": 3,
      "fname": "B",
      "lname": "Y"
    }, {
      "empid": 4,
      "fname": "C",
      "lname": "Y"
    }, {
      "empid": 5,
      "fname": "C",
      "lname": "Y"
    }]
  };


data.records = data.records.filter( i => ids.includes( i.empid ) );

console.info( data );

2
  • 3
    Some words of explanation would increase the value of your answer immensely for JavaScript beginners. ;)
    – Andreas
    Commented Aug 10, 2020 at 9:56
  • 1
    @Andreas, He basically creates a temporary array (ids) that he wants to use as a filter criteria. Then he uses the filter function on the data.records array and says "remove all items that do not have an ID matching one of those in the temporary array", and reassigns this to the data.records array. The key functions here are Array.filter and Array.includes.
    – Tyler
    Commented Aug 24, 2022 at 6:52
3

This is a fast solution with a temporary object.

var records = [{ "empid": 1, "fname": "X", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 2, "fname": "A", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 3, "fname": "B", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 4, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 5, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }],
    empid = [1, 4, 5],
    object = {},
    result;

records.forEach(function (a) {
    object[a.empid] = a;
});

result = empid.map(function (a) {
    return object[a];
});
document.write('<pre>' + JSON.stringify(result, 0, 4) + '</pre>');

1
  • Yeah this even looks good. More likely as hash key look up,I will check this one as well. Thanks @Nina
    – krsnaadi
    Commented Mar 5, 2016 at 18:15
2

You can use Array#filter function and additional array for storing sorted values;

var recordsSorted = []

ids.forEach(function(e) {
    recordsSorted.push(records.filter(function(o) {
        return o.empid === e;
    }));
});

console.log(recordsSorted);

Result:

[ [ { empid: 1, fname: 'X', lname: 'Y' } ],
  [ { empid: 4, fname: 'C', lname: 'Y' } ],
  [ { empid: 5, fname: 'C', lname: 'Y' } ] ]
1

Fastest way (will take extra memory):

var empid=[1,4,5]
var records = [{ "empid": 1, "fname": "X", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 2, "fname": "A", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 3, "fname": "B", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 4, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }, { "empid": 5, "fname": "C", "lname": "Y" }] ;

var empIdObj={};

empid.forEach(function(element) {
empIdObj[element]=true;
});

var filteredArray=[];

records.forEach(function(element) {
if(empIdObj[element.empid])
    filteredArray.push(element)
});
0

Old way of doing it. Many might hate this way of doing but i still many time find this is still better in my perspective.

Input:

var records = [{
    "empid":1,
    "fname": "X",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":2,
    "fname": "A",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":3,
    "fname": "B",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":4,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
},
{
    "empid":5,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
}
]

var newArr = [1,4,5];

Code:

var newObj = [];
for(var a = 0 ; a < records.length ; a++){
 if(newArr.indexOf(records[a].empid) > -1){
  newObj.push(records[a]);
 }
}

The indexOf() method returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.

Reference - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/indexOf

Output:

[{
    "empid": 1,
    "fname": "X",
    "lname": "Y"
}, {
    "empid": 4,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
}, {
    "empid": 5,
    "fname": "C",
    "lname": "Y"
}]
0
var records = [{
 "empid":1,
 "fname": "X",
 "lname": "Y"
},
{
 "empid":2,
 "fname": "A",
 "lname": "Y"
}

]


let search="A"
 
let values= Result.filter(item =>
     keys.some(key => 
         String(item[key]).toLowerCase().includes(search.toLowerCase()) 
     )
 );

multikey search in object Array eg.(empid,fname,lname)

2
  • 1
    Please add further details to expand on your answer, such as working code or documentation citations.
    – Community Bot
    Commented Sep 10, 2021 at 11:42
  • You could use the javascript/html/css snippet accessible with CTRL+M to make the code able to be run.
    – Paulo
    Commented Sep 10, 2021 at 12:17
-1

In case you have key value pairs in your input array, I used:

.filter(
          this.multi_items[0] != null && store.state.isSearchBox === false
            ? item =>
                _.map(this.multi_items, "value").includes(item["wijknaam"])
            : item => item["wijknaam"].includes("")
        );

where the input array is multi_items as: [{"text": "bla1", "value": "green"}, {"text": etc. etc.}]

_.map is a lodash function.

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