60

What do the curly braces surrounding JavaScript arguments for functions do?

var port = chrome.extension.connect({name: "testing"});
port.postMessage({found: (count != undefined)});

4 Answers 4

213

A second possible answer has arisen since this question was asked. Javascript ES6 introduced Destructuring Assignment.

var x = function({ foo }) {
   console.log(foo)
}

var y = {
  bar: "hello",
  foo: "Good bye"
}

x(y)


Result: "Good bye"
2
  • 31
    Thank you so much. This is exactly the answer I was looking for. More here.
    – FuzzY
    Dec 11, 2015 at 7:30
  • 5
    This is actually the correct answer, as the question states "for functions".
    – George Y.
    Oct 25, 2019 at 2:40
40

The curly braces denote an object literal. It is a way of sending key/value pairs of data.

So this:

var obj = {name: "testing"};

Is used like this to access the data.

obj.name; // gives you "testing"

You can give the object several comma separated key/value pairs, as long as the keys are unique.

var obj = {name: "testing",
           another: "some other value",
           "a-key": "needed quotes because of the hyphen"
          };

You can also use square brackets to access the properties of the object.

This would be required in the case of the "a-key".

obj["a-key"] // gives you "needed quotes because of the hyphen"

Using the square brackets, you can access a value using a property name stored in a variable.

var some_variable = "name";

obj[ some_variable ] // gives you "testing"
0
3

Curly braces in javascript are used as shorthand to create objects. For example:

// Create an object with a key "name" initialized to the value "testing"
var test = { name : "testing" };
alert(test.name); // alerts "testing"

Check out Douglas Crockford's JavaScript Survey for more detail.

0
var x = {title: 'the title'};

defines an object literal that has properties on it. you can do

x.title 

which will evaluate to 'the title;

this is a common technique for passing configurations to methods, which is what is going on here.

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.