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In the snippet below the goal is to check if the addedPlayer already exist in players by checking the .name property

if addedPlayer is already in players : Give the player a point

else update players by adding in addedPlayer with a starting point

let players = []

let addedPlayer = { 

   name: /* The Given Name To Check in players */ ,
   points: 1

}

function addPlayer(playerList, playerToAdd){

   const existingPlayers = playerList.map((playerToAdd) => playerToAdd.name);

   if(existingPlayers.includes(playerToAdd.name)){

       playerToAdd.points++

   } else {

      playerList.push(playerToAdd)

   }
}

addPlayer(players, addedPlayer)

console.log(players)

The problem is players only returns addedPlayer. My Goal being that players will store every new player and adds points accordingly

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  • Your code works just fine, except for the part, where it is supposed to increase points as you're incrementing playerToAdd.points which you never store to your playerList May 28, 2020 at 20:39

2 Answers 2

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You can achieve that by finding if the newPlayer already exists in the given array by checking against player.name then conditionally incrementing player.point if newPlayer already exists else adding the newPlayer to the array.

Here is an example.

let players = [
    {
        name: 'Player1',
        point: 1
    },
    {
        name: 'Player2',
        point: 2
    }
]

let newPlayer = { 
   name: 'Player2',
   points: 1
}

function addPlayer(playerlist, newPlayer) {
    // idx will be -1 if a player does not exist in playerlist by the name
    const idx = playerlist.findIndex(p => p.name === newPlayer.name);

    if (idx === -1) {
        // if you want to mutate the original array you can use playerlist.push(newPlayer) then return immediately from the function and omit the next return line
        return [...playerlist, newPlayer]
    }
    
    // increment player.point if newPlayer already exists

    playerlist[idx] = {...playerlist[idx], point: playerlist[idx].point + 1}
    // if you want to mutate the original array then omit the next return line
    return [...playerlist]
}

// because newPlayer already exists in players array by name calling the function addPlayer will increment player.point in players array where player.name is 'Player2'
console.log(addPlayer(players, newPlayer))

// calling the function with a player that does not exist in the array
let anotherPlayer = { name: 'Player3', point: 0 };

// anotherPlayer will be added to the returned array
console.log(addPlayer(players, anotherPlayer))

P.S. - The current solution will return a new array on each call of the addPlayer function if your use case requires you to mutate the array you can use Array.prototype.push and omit the returns from the function. I have included some comments in the snippet for more details.

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  • Got it! Thanks for the help
    – Elitezen
    May 28, 2020 at 21:00
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It's considered good practice to always initialize our variables. I just created a name variable for our user object.

Each time you run addPlayer it will now push new players to the list.

let players = []
var name = "";

let addedPlayer = {

    name: name,
    points: 1

}

function addPlayer(playerList, playerToAdd) {

    const existingPlayers = playerList.map((playerToAdd) => playerToAdd.name);

    if (existingPlayers.includes(playerToAdd.name)) {

        playerToAdd.points++

    } else {

        playerList.push(playerToAdd)

    }
}

addPlayer(players, addedPlayer)

console.log(players)

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