6

I have a javascript object like this

let Lila = { 
  name: 'Lila', 
  height: `5'10"`,
  weight: 185
}

I want to iterate it using next()

1
  • 1
    You can iterate through an object's keys using Object.keys() Jan 6, 2018 at 21:35

6 Answers 6

12

You could assign a Symbol.iterator property to the object with an iterator.

Read more about the use of iterator.next in iteration protocols.

let lila = { name: 'Lila', height: '5\'10"', weight: 185 };

lila[Symbol.iterator] = function* () {
    var k;
    for (k in this) {
        yield [k, this[k]];
    }
};

var iterator = lila[Symbol.iterator]();

console.log(iterator.next()); // get the first of a sequence of values

console.log([...lila]);       // get all key/values pairs
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }

0
4

here is the answer

const Lila = {
    name: 'Lila',
    height: `5'10"`,
    weight: 185,
    [Symbol.iterator]() {
        let index = 0; // use index to track properties 
        let properties = Object.keys(this); // get the properties of the object 
        let Done = false; // set to true when the loop is done 
        return { // return the next method, need for iterator 
            next: () => {
                Done = (index >= properties.length);
                // define the object you will return done state, value eg Lila ,key eg 
                //name
                let obj = {
                    done: Done,
                    value: this[properties[index]],
                    key: properties[index]
                };
                index++; // increment index
                return obj;
            }
        };
    }
};
1

why do you need an iterator or a generator? Keep it simple and just iterate over the object...

const lila = { name: 'Lila', height: '5\'10"', weight: 185 };

for (key in lila) { console.log(lila[key]) }
1

you can convert an object to an iterable (Array) with Object.entries

let Lila = {
  name: 'Lila',
  height: 5.10,
  weight: 185
};
let iterableLila = Object.entries(Lila);
console.log(iterableLila);

0

You can iterate through an object's keys using Object.keys() and then just encapsulate it normally with an iterator function:

function makeIterator(obj) {
    let keys = Object.keys(obj);
    let current_index = 0;

    return {
       next: function() {
           return current_index < keys.length ?
               {value: obj[keys[current_index++]], done: false} :
               {done: true};
       }
    };
}

then you can use it like that:

let Lila = { name: 'Lila', height:5'10",
    weight: 185}
let iterator = makeIterator(Lila)
console.log(iterator.next().value)
console.log(iterator.next().value)
console.log(iterator.next().value)
0

Try following:

const lila = {
  name: "lila",
  height: "5'10",
  weight: 185,
  [Symbol.iterator] () {
    let step = 0;
    let properties = Object.keys(this); 
    return{ 
      next(){
        return{
          value: properties[step],
          done: step++ === properties.length
        }
      }
    }
  }
}for (let prop of lila){console.log(prop)}

1
  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jan 10 at 15:37

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