Osama
Osama

Reputation: 311

Get the value of an object with an unknown single key in JS

How can I get the value of an object with an unknown single key?

Example:

var obj = {dbm: -45}

I want to get the -45 value without knowing its key.

I know that I can loop over the object keys (which is always one).

for (var key in objects) {
    var value = objects[key];
}

But I would like to know if there is a cleaner solution for this?

Upvotes: 21

Views: 28100

Answers (2)

T.J. Crowder
T.J. Crowder

Reputation: 1075755

There's a new option now: Object.values. So if you know the object will have just one property:

const array = Object.values(obj)[0];

Live Example:

const json = '{"EXAMPLE": [ "example1","example2","example3","example4" ]}';
const obj = JSON.parse(json);
const array = Object.values(obj)[0];
console.log(array);

If you need to know the name of the property as well, there's Object.entries and destructuring:

const [name, array] = Object.entries(obj)[0];

Live Example:

const json = '{"EXAMPLE": [ "example1","example2","example3","example4" ]}';
const obj = JSON.parse(json);
const [name, array] = Object.entries(obj)[0];
console.log(name);
console.log(array);

Upvotes: 16

Blauharley
Blauharley

Reputation: 4256

Object.keys might be a solution:

Object.keys({ dbm: -45}); // ["dbm"]

The differences between for-in and Object.keys is that Object.keys returns all own key names and for-in can be used to iterate over all own and inherited key names of an object.

As James Brierley commented below you can assign an unknown property of an object in this fashion:

var obj = { dbm:-45 };
var unkownKey = Object.keys(obj)[0];
obj[unkownKey] = 52;

But you have to keep in mind that assigning a property that Object.keys returns key name in some order of might be error-prone.

Upvotes: 27

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