Is there a clever (i.e. optimized) way to rename a key in a javascript object?
A non-optimized way would be:
o[ new_key ] = o[ old_key ];
delete o[ old_key ];
Is there a clever (i.e. optimized) way to rename a key in a javascript object?
A non-optimized way would be:
o[ new_key ] = o[ old_key ];
delete o[ old_key ];
The most complete (and correct) way of doing this would be, I believe:
if (old_key !== new_key) {
Object.defineProperty(o, new_key,
Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(o, old_key));
delete o[old_key];
}
This method ensures that the renamed property behaves identically to the original one.
Also, it seems to me that the possibility to wrap this into a function/method and put it into Object.prototype is irrelevant regarding your question.
You could wrap the work in a function and assign it to the Object prototype. Maybe use the fluent interface style to make multiple renames flow.
Object.prototype.renameProperty = function (oldName, newName) {
// Do nothing if the names are the same
if (oldName === newName) {
return this;
}
// Check for the old property name to avoid a ReferenceError in strict mode.
if (this.hasOwnProperty(oldName)) {
this[newName] = this[oldName];
delete this[oldName];
}
return this;
};
ECMAScript 5 Specific
I wish the syntax wasn't this complex but it is definitely nice having more control.
Object.defineProperty(
Object.prototype,
'renameProperty',
{
writable : false, // Cannot alter this property
enumerable : false, // Will not show up in a for-in loop.
configurable : false, // Cannot be deleted via the delete operator
value : function (oldName, newName) {
// Do nothing if the names are the same
if (oldName === newName) {
return this;
}
// Check for the old property name to
// avoid a ReferenceError in strict mode.
if (this.hasOwnProperty(oldName)) {
this[newName] = this[oldName];
delete this[oldName];
}
return this;
}
}
);
In case someone needs to rename a list of properties:
function renameKeys(obj, newKeys) {
const keyValues = Object.keys(obj).map(key => {
const newKey = newKeys[key] || key;
return { [newKey]: obj[key] };
});
return Object.assign({}, ...keyValues);
}
Usage:
const obj = { a: "1", b: "2" };
const newKeys = { a: "A", c: "C" };
const renamedObj = renameKeys(obj, newKeys);
console.log(renamedObj);
// {A:"1", b:"2"}
ES6(ES2015) way!we need keeping up with the times!
const old_obj = {
k1: `111`,
k2: `222`,
k3: `333`
};
console.log(`old_obj =\n`, old_obj);
// {k1: "111", k2: "222", k3: "333"}
/**
* @author xgqfrms
* @description ES6 ...spread & Destructuring Assignment
*/
const {
k1: kA,
k2: kB,
k3: kC,
} = {...old_obj}
console.log(`kA = ${kA},`, `kB = ${kB},`, `kC = ${kC}\n`);
// kA = 111, kB = 222, kC = 333
const new_obj = Object.assign(
{},
{
kA,
kB,
kC
}
);
console.log(`new_obj =\n`, new_obj);
// {kA: "111", kB: "222", kC: "333"}
If you don’t want to mutate your data, consider this function...
renameProp = (oldProp, newProp, { [oldProp]: old, ...others }) => ({
[newProp]: old,
...others
})
A thorough explanation by Yazeed Bzadough https://medium.com/front-end-hacking/immutably-rename-object-keys-in-javascript-5f6353c7b6dd
Here is a typescript friendly version:
// These generics are inferred, do not pass them in.
export const renameKey = <
OldKey extends keyof T,
NewKey extends string,
T extends Record<string, unknown>
>(
oldKey: OldKey,
newKey: NewKey extends keyof T ? never : NewKey,
userObject: T
): Record<NewKey, T[OldKey]> & Omit<T, OldKey> => {
const { [oldKey]: value, ...common } = userObject
return {
...common,
...({ [newKey]: value } as Record<NewKey, T[OldKey]>)
}
}
It will prevent you from clobbering an existing key or renaming it to the same thing
A variation using object destructuring and spread operator:
const old_obj = {
k1: `111`,
k2: `222`,
k3: `333`
};
// destructuring, with renaming. The variable 'rest' will hold those values not assigned to kA, kB, or kC.
const {
k1: kA,
k2: kB,
k3: kC,
...rest
} = old_obj;
// now create a new object, with the renamed properties kA, kB, kC;
// spread the remaining original properties in the 'rest' variable
const newObj = {kA, kB, kC, ...rest};
For one key, this can be as simple as:
const { k1: kA, ...rest } = old_obj;
const new_obj = { kA, ...rest }
You may also prefer a more 'traditional' style:
const { k1, ...rest } = old_obj
const new_obj = { kA: k1, ...rest}
Most of the answers here fail to maintain JS Object key-value pairs order. If you have a form of object key-value pairs on the screen that you want to modify, for example, it is important to preserve the order of object entries.
The ES6 way of looping through the JS object and replacing key-value pair with the new pair with a modified key name would be something like:
let newWordsObject = {};
Object.keys(oldObject).forEach(key => {
if (key === oldKey) {
let newPair = { [newKey]: oldObject[oldKey] };
newWordsObject = { ...newWordsObject, ...newPair }
} else {
newWordsObject = { ...newWordsObject, [key]: oldObject[key] }
}
});
The solution preserves the order of entries by adding the new entry in the place of the old one.
You can try lodash _.mapKeys.
var user = {
name: "Andrew",
id: 25,
reported: false
};
var renamed = _.mapKeys(user, function(value, key) {
return key + "_" + user.id;
});
console.log(renamed);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lodash.js/4.17.11/lodash.js"></script>
I would say that it would be better from a conceptual point of view to just leave the old object (the one from the web service) as it is, and put the values you need in a new object. I'm assuming you are extracting specific fields at one point or another anyway, if not on the client, then at least on the server. The fact that you chose to use field names that are the same as those from the web service, only lowercase, doesn't really change this. So, I'd advise to do something like this:
var myObj = {
field1: theirObj.FIELD1,
field2: theirObj.FIELD2,
(etc)
}
Of course, I'm making all kinds of assumptions here, which may not be true. If this doesn't apply to you, or if it's too slow (is it? I haven't tested, but I imagine the difference gets smaller as the number of fields increases), please ignore all of this :)
If you don't want to do this, and you only have to support specific browsers, you could also use the new getters to also return "uppercase(field)": see http://robertnyman.com/2009/05/28/getters-and-setters-with-javascript-code-samples-and-demos/ and the links on that page for more information.
EDIT:
Incredibly, this is also almost twice as fast, at least on my FF3.5 at work. See: http://jsperf.com/spiny001
Personally, the most effective way to rename keys in object without implementing extra heavy plugins and wheels:
var str = JSON.stringify(object);
str = str.replace(/oldKey/g, 'newKey');
str = str.replace(/oldKey2/g, 'newKey2');
object = JSON.parse(str);
You can also wrap it in try-catch if your object has invalid structure. Works perfectly :)
While this does not exactly give a better solution to renaming a key, it provides a quick and easy ES6 way to rename all keys in an object while not mutating the data they contain.
let b = {a: ["1"], b:["2"]};
Object.keys(b).map(id => {
b[`root_${id}`] = [...b[id]];
delete b[id];
});
console.log(b);
oldJson=[{firstName:'s1',lastName:'v1'},
{firstName:'s2',lastName:'v2'},
{firstName:'s3',lastName:'v3'}]
newJson = oldJson.map(rec => {
return {
'Last Name': rec.lastName,
'First Name': rec.firstName,
}
})
output: [{Last Name:"v1",First Name:"s1"},
{Last Name:"v2",First Name:"s2"},
{Last Name:"v3",First Name:"s3"}]
better to have a new array
Some of the solutions listed on this page have some side-effects:
Here is a solution which keeps the position of the key in the same place and is compatible in IE9+, but has to create a new object and may not be the fastest solution:
function renameObjectKey(oldObj, oldName, newName) {
const newObj = {};
Object.keys(oldObj).forEach(key => {
const value = oldObj[key];
if (key === oldName) {
newObj[newName] = value;
} else {
newObj[key] = value;
}
});
return newObj;
}
Please note: IE9 may not support forEach in strict mode
Yet another way with the most powerful REDUCE method.
data = {key1: "value1", key2: "value2", key3: "value3"};
keyMap = {key1: "firstkey", key2: "secondkey", key3: "thirdkey"};
mappedData = Object.keys(keyMap).reduce((obj,k) => Object.assign(obj, { [keyMap[k]]: data[k] }),{});
console.log(mappedData);
If you want to retain the iteration order (order of insertion), here is a suggestion:
const renameObjectKey = (object, oldName, newName) => {
const updatedObject = {}
for(let key in object) {
if (key === oldName) {
newObject[newName] = object[key]
} else {
newObject[key] = object[key]
}
}
object = updatedObject
}
This is a small modification that I made to the function of pomber; To be able to take an Array of Objects instead of an object alone and also you can activate index. also the "Keys" can be assigned by an array
function renameKeys(arrayObject, newKeys, index = false) {
let newArray = [];
arrayObject.forEach((obj,item)=>{
const keyValues = Object.keys(obj).map((key,i) => {
return {[newKeys[i] || key]:obj[key]}
});
let id = (index) ? {'ID':item} : {};
newArray.push(Object.assign(id, ...keyValues));
});
return newArray;
}
test
const obj = [{ a: "1", b: "2" }, { a: "5", b: "4" } ,{ a: "3", b: "0" }];
const newKeys = ["A","C"];
const renamedObj = renameKeys(obj, newKeys);
console.log(renamedObj);
Your way is optimized, in my opinion. But you will end up with reordered keys. Newly created key will be appended at the end. I know you should never rely on key order, but if you need to preserve it, you will need to go through all keys and construct new object one by one, replacing the key in question during that process.
Like this:
var new_o={};
for (var i in o)
{
if (i==old_key) new_o[new_key]=o[old_key];
else new_o[i]=o[i];
}
o=new_o;
npm i paix
import { paix } from 'paix';
const source_object = { FirstName: "Jhon", LastName: "Doe", Ignored: true };
const replacement = { FirstName: 'first_name', LastName: 'last_name' };
const modified_object = paix(source_object, replacement);
console.log(modified_object);
// { Ignored: true, first_name: 'Jhon', last_name: 'Doe' };
const clone = (obj) => Object.assign({}, obj);
const renameKey = (object, key, newKey) => {
const clonedObj = clone(object);
const targetKey = clonedObj[key];
delete clonedObj[key];
clonedObj[newKey] = targetKey;
return clonedObj;
};
let contact = {radiant: 11, dire: 22};
contact = renameKey(contact, 'radiant', 'aplha');
contact = renameKey(contact, 'dire', 'omega');
console.log(contact); // { aplha: 11, omega: 22 };
Would there be any problem with simply doing this?
someObject = {...someObject, [newKey]: someObject.oldKey}
delete someObject.oldKey
Which could be wrapped in a function, if preferred:
const renameObjectKey = (object, oldKey, newKey) => {
// if keys are the same, do nothing
if (oldKey === newKey) return;
// if old key doesn't exist, do nothing (alternatively, throw an error)
if (!object.oldKey) return;
// if new key already exists on object, do nothing (again - alternatively, throw an error)
if (object.newKey !== undefined) return;
object = { ...object, [newKey]: object[oldKey] };
delete object[oldKey];
return { ...object };
};
// in use
let myObject = {
keyOne: 'abc',
keyTwo: 123
};
// avoids mutating original
let renamed = renameObjectKey(myObject, 'keyTwo', 'renamedKey');
console.log(myObject, renamed);
// myObject
/* {
"keyOne": "abc",
"keyTwo": 123,
} */
// renamed
/* {
"keyOne": "abc",
"renamedKey": 123,
} */
const data = res
const lista = []
let newElement: any
if (data && data.length > 0) {
data.forEach(element => {
newElement = element
Object.entries(newElement).map(([key, value]) =>
Object.assign(newElement, {
[key.toLowerCase()]: value
}, delete newElement[key], delete newElement['_id'])
)
lista.push(newElement)
})
}
return lista