How to fill a Javascript object literal with many static key/value pairs efficiently?

JavascriptObject LiteralStatic Initialization

Javascript Problem Overview


The typical way of creating a Javascript object is the following:

var map = new Object();
map[myKey1] = myObj1;
map[myKey2] = myObj2;

I need to create such a map where both keys and values are Strings. I have a large but static set of pairs to add to the map.

Is there any way to perform something like this in Javascript:

var map =  { { "aaa", "rrr" }, { "bbb", "ppp" } ... };

or do I have to perform something like this for each entry:

map["aaa"]="rrr";
map["bbb"]="ppp";
...

Basically, remaining Javascript code will loop over this map and extract values according to criterias known 'at runtime'. If there is a better data structure for this looping job, I am interested too. My objective is to minimize code.

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

In ES2015 a.k.a ES6 version of JavaScript, a new datatype called Map is introduced.

let map = new Map([["key1", "value1"], ["key2", "value2"]]);
map.get("key1"); // => value1

check this reference for more info.

Solution 2 - Javascript

JavaScript's object literal syntax, which is typically used to instantiate objects (seriously, no one uses new Object or new Array), is as follows:

var obj = {
    'key': 'value',
    'another key': 'another value',
     anUnquotedKey: 'more value!'
};

For arrays it's:

var arr = [
    'value',
    'another value',
    'even more values'
];

If you need objects within objects, that's fine too:

var obj = {
    'subObject': {
        'key': 'value'
    },
    'another object': {
         'some key': 'some value',
         'another key': 'another value',
         'an array': [ 'this', 'is', 'ok', 'as', 'well' ]
    }
}

This convenient method of being able to instantiate static data is what led to the JSON data format.

JSON is a little more picky, keys must be enclosed in double-quotes, as well as string values:

{"foo":"bar", "keyWithIntegerValue":123}

Solution 3 - Javascript

It works fine with the object literal notation:

var map = { key : { "aaa", "rrr" }, 
            key2: { "bbb", "ppp" } // trailing comma leads to syntax error in IE!
          }

Btw, the common way to instantiate arrays

var array = [];
// directly with values:
var array = [ "val1", "val2", 3 /*numbers may be unquoted*/, 5, "val5" ];

and objects

var object = {};

Also you can do either:

obj.property     // this is prefered but you can also do
obj["property"]  // this is the way to go when you have the keyname stored in a var

var key = "property";
obj[key] // is the same like obj.property

Solution 4 - Javascript

Give this a try:

var map = {"aaa": "rrr", "bbb": "ppp"};

Solution 5 - Javascript

The syntax you wrote as first is not valid. You can achieve something using the follow:

var map =  {"aaa": "rrr", "bbb": "ppp" /* etc */ };

Solution 6 - Javascript

Try this typescript

const MAP: Record<string, string> = {
  key1: 'value1'
};

MAP[this.name]

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionJ&#233;r&#244;me VerstryngeView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptNitinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptzzzzBovView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptChristophView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptMKSView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptZER0View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavascriptJohnny CageView Answer on Stackoverflow