Let me try to explain this, I have a string like this:
"b.c"
And an object like this:
a = {
b:{
c:2
}
}
I would like to us开发者_如何学运维e that string to get the c
property, but using this doesn't work:
a["b.c"]
How can I use the "b.c"
string to work just like a.b.c
? (Without using eval, perfomance is important in my case)
What about something like this:
function load(path) {
var steps = path.split('.');
var level = this;
for(var i=0;i<steps.length;i++) {
level = level[steps[i]];
}
return level;
};
var value = load(a, 'b.c');
Another approach using the Array.prototype.reduce
method:
function load(obj, path) {
return path.split('.').reduce(function (a, b) {
return a[b];
}, obj);
}
Usage:
var a = {
b: {
c: 2
}
};
load(a, 'b.c'); // 2
Notes:
1- The reduce
method is not available on IE <= 8, but a standard compliant version can be found in the liked page.
2- You should keep in mind that property names can contain dots, e.g.:
var a = {
"foo.bar": 10
};
If this cause you problems, it would be better to pass an array to the function, containing the property names to the function, instead of a dot-separated string.
精彩评论