235

Is there a Mustache / Handlebars way of looping through an object properties?

So with

var o = {
  bob : 'For sure',
  roger: 'Unknown',
  donkey: 'What an ass'
}

Can I then do something in the template engine that would be equivalent to

for(var prop in o)
{
    // with say, prop a variable in the template and value the property value
}

?

0

8 Answers 8

495

Built-in support since Handlebars 1.0rc1

Support for this functionality has been added to Handlebars.js, so there is no more need for external helpers.

How to use it

For arrays:

{{#each myArray}}
    Index: {{@index}} Value = {{this}}
{{/each}}

For objects:

{{#each myObject}}
    Key: {{@key}} Value = {{this}}
{{/each}}

Note that only properties passing the hasOwnProperty test will be enumerated.

16
  • 3
    @Rafi: one cannot make much sense of that without knowing your data structure though.
    – Jon
    Jul 22, 2013 at 18:11
  • 4
    @Rafi: don't you mean {{this.title}}?
    – nevyn
    Oct 17, 2013 at 9:43
  • 2
    @qodeninja: Simple: the same way you refer to the values in the examples above -- with {{#each this}}. Your choice of terms is also confusing (what makes one object "top level" and another not? what are "pre-defined" keys exactly? etc), so you might want to revisit these concepts.
    – Jon
    Feb 11, 2014 at 9:42
  • 1
    if not mistaken then only with v1.1.0 this is available, but great answer thanks. Jul 1, 2015 at 14:23
  • 3
    How do you do this for only a specific whitelist of properties? Jul 28, 2015 at 14:43
74

It's actually quite easy to implement as a helper:

Handlebars.registerHelper('eachProperty', function(context, options) {
    var ret = "";
    for(var prop in context)
    {
        ret = ret + options.fn({property:prop,value:context[prop]});
    }
    return ret;
});

Then using it like so:

{{#eachProperty object}}
    {{property}}: {{value}}<br/>
{{/eachProperty }}
2
  • 2
    Looks good, do you need to add a hasOwnProperty check inside the loop so you're not iterating over prototype properties?
    – monkeyboy
    Nov 28, 2012 at 11:26
  • Great solution @Ben. In case anyone is trying to use this with Ember, see my answer below for the solution to get it working.
    – flynfish
    May 29, 2013 at 19:54
29

EDIT: Handlebars now has a built-in way of accomplishing this; see the selected answer above. When working with plain Mustache, the below still applies.

Mustache can iterate over items in an array. So I'd suggest creating a separate data object formatted in a way Mustache can work with:

var o = {
  bob : 'For sure',
  roger: 'Unknown',
  donkey: 'What an ass'
},
mustacheFormattedData = { 'people' : [] };

for (var prop in o){
  if (o.hasOwnProperty(prop)){
    mustacheFormattedData['people'].push({
      'key' : prop,
      'value' : o[prop]
     });
  }
}

Now, your Mustache template would be something like:

{{#people}}
  {{key}} : {{value}}
{{/people}}

Check out the "Non-Empty Lists" section here: https://github.com/janl/mustache.js

3
  • 1
    Ended up going with your suggestion as I need to pass some additional sub properties anyway. Thanks for the help!
    – Ben
    Jan 30, 2012 at 11:28
  • Thanks very much, your idea saved me another day of looking of alternatives. This line is the key mustacheFormattedData = { 'people' : [] };
    – Matt
    Sep 2, 2013 at 15:17
  • How would you do this with an array of "o" objects?
    – red888
    Sep 25, 2014 at 19:49
5

This is @Ben's answer updated for use with Ember...note you have to use Ember.get because context is passed in as a String.

Ember.Handlebars.registerHelper('eachProperty', function(context, options) {
  var ret = "";
  var newContext = Ember.get(this, context);
  for(var prop in newContext)
  {
    if (newContext.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
      ret = ret + options.fn({property:prop,value:newContext[prop]});
    }
  }
  return ret;
});

Template:

{{#eachProperty object}}
  {{key}}: {{value}}<br/>
{{/eachProperty }}
2
  • Thanks @flynfish. context is a string in Ember?? that seems.. somewhat odd.
    – Ben
    May 30, 2013 at 0:20
  • Yea I'm not really sure since I am new to Ember and still trying to find my way around it.
    – flynfish
    May 30, 2013 at 5:04
1

@Amit's answer is good because it will work in both Mustache and Handlebars.

As far as Handlebars-only solutions, I've seen a few and I like the each_with_key block helper at https://gist.github.com/1371586 the best.

  • It allows you to iterate over object literals without having to restructure them first, and
  • It gives you control over what you call the key variable. With many other solutions you have to be careful about using object keys named 'key', or 'property', etc.
1
  • Nice find. Just a warning to other readers: the "key_value" helper in this gist has a bug in it. Read the comments for how to fix it.
    – sirentian
    Oct 25, 2012 at 7:48
0

Thanks for Ben's solution, my use case to display only particular fields in order

with object

Code:

    handlebars.registerHelper('eachToDisplayProperty', function(context, toDisplays, options) {
    var ret = "";
    var toDisplayKeyList = toDisplays.split(",");
    for(var i = 0; i < toDisplayKeyList.length; i++) {
        toDisplayKey = toDisplayKeyList[i];
        if(context[toDisplayKey]) {
            ret = ret + options.fn({
                property : toDisplayKey,
                value : context[toDisplayKey]
            });
        }

    }
    return ret;
});

Source object:

   { locationDesc:"abc", name:"ghi", description:"def", four:"you wont see this"}

Template:

{{#eachToDisplayProperty this "locationDesc,description,name"}}
    <div>
        {{property}} --- {{value}}
    </div>
    {{/eachToDisplayProperty}}

Output:

locationDesc --- abc
description --- def
name --- ghi
0

This is a helper function for mustacheJS, without pre-formatting the data and instead getting it during render.

var data = {
    valueFromMap: function() {
        return function(text, render) {
            // "this" will be an object with map key property
            // text will be color that we have between the mustache-tags
            // in the template
            // render is the function that mustache gives us

            // still need to loop since we have no idea what the key is
            // but there will only be one
            for ( var key in this) {
                if (this.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
                    return render(this[key][text]);
                }
            }
        };
    },

    list: {
        blueHorse: {
            color: 'blue'
        },

        redHorse: {
            color: 'red'
        }
    }
};

Template:

{{#list}}
    {{#.}}<span>color: {{#valueFromMap}}color{{/valueFromMap}}</span> <br/>{{/.}}
{{/list}}

Outputs:

color: blue
color: red

(order might be random - it's a map) This might be useful if you know the map element that you want. Just watch out for falsy values.

-2

I was using old version 1.0.beta.6 of handlebars, i think somewhere during 1.1 - 1.3 this functionality was added, so updating to 1.3.0 solved the issue, here is the usage:

Usage:

{{#each object}}
  Key {{@key}} : Value {{this}}
{{/people}}

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