I have an array of objects -
[{
title: "oranges",
id: 5802537,
cart: {
purchased: 3,
stockTotal: 9
},
price: 3,
department: "fresh fruit and veg"
},
{
title: "pasta",
id: 5802537,
cart: {
purchased: 2,
stockTotal: 15
},
price: 1,
department: "dry goods"
},
{
title: "eggs",
id: 5802537,
cart: {
purchased: 1,
stockTotal: 11
},
price: 2,
department: "baking"
}
]
I am trying to write a function that will get add up all the stockTotal and purchased from each object. I have tried this -
let val = items.reduce(function(previousValue, currentValue) {
return {
purchased: previousValue.cart.purchased + currentValue.cart.purchased,
stockTotal: previousValue.cart.stockTotal + currentValue.cart.stockTotal
};
});
console.log(val);
However, it says that it cannot read property 'purchased' of undefined and cannot read property 'stockTotal' of undefined. I am wondering if this is because stockTotal and purchased are in their own object within each object in the array?
.reduce()
callback is not the "previous" element. It's the return value of the callback for the previous element. And that's an object without a.cart
property. Only on the first execution of the callbackpreviousValue
would be the an element from the array (the first one), when there's no second argument for the.reduce()
call - check the documentationJSON.parse('[{"foo":"bar"},{"foo":"bar"}]')
. What prevents OP to have used similar evaluation?