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JavaScript Object Properties


Properties are the most important part of any JavaScript object.


JavaScript Properties

Properties are the values associated with a JavaScript object.

A JavaScript object is a collection of unordered properties.

Properties can usually be changed, added, and deleted, but some are read only.


Accessing JavaScript Properties

The syntax for accessing the property of an object is:

objectName.property      // person.age

or

objectName["property"]   // person["age"]

or

objectName[expression]   // x = "age"; person[x]

The expression must evaluate to a property name.

Example 1

person.firstname + " is " + person.age + " years old.";
Try it Yourself »

Example 2

person["firstname"] + " is " + person["age"] + " years old.";
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JavaScript for...in Loop

The JavaScript for...in statement loops through the properties of an object.

Syntax

for (let variable in object) {
  // code to be executed
}

The block of code inside of the for...in loop will be executed once for each property.

Looping through the properties of an object:

Example

const person = {
  fname:" John",
  lname:" Doe",
  age: 25
};

for (let x in person) {
  txt += person[x];
}
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Adding New Properties

You can add new properties to an existing object by simply giving it a value.

Assume that the person object already exists - you can then give it new properties:

Example

person.nationality = "English";
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Deleting Properties

The delete keyword deletes a property from an object:

Example

const person = {
  firstName: "John",
  lastName: "Doe",
  age: 50,
  eyeColor: "blue"
};

delete person.age;
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or delete person["age"];

Example

const person = {
  firstName: "John",
  lastName: "Doe",
  age: 50,
  eyeColor: "blue"
};

delete person["age"];
Try it Yourself »

The delete keyword deletes both the value of the property and the property itself.

After deletion, the property cannot be used before it is added back again.

The delete operator is designed to be used on object properties. It has no effect on variables or functions.

The delete operator should not be used on predefined JavaScript object properties. It can crash your application.


Nested Objects

Values in an object can be another object:

Example

myObj = {
  name:"John",
  age:30,
  cars: {
    car1:"Ford",
    car2:"BMW",
    car3:"Fiat"
  }
}

You can access nested objects using the dot notation or the bracket notation:

Example

myObj.cars.car2;
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or:

Example

myObj.cars["car2"];
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or:

Example

myObj["cars"]["car2"];
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or:

Example

let p1 = "cars";
let p2 = "car2";
myObj[p1][p2];
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Nested Arrays and Objects

Values in objects can be arrays, and values in arrays can be objects:

Example

const myObj = {
  name: "John",
  age: 30,
  cars: [
    {name:"Ford", "models":["Fiesta", "Focus", "Mustang"]},
    {name:"BMW", "models":["320", "X3", "X5"]},
    {name:"Fiat", "models":["500", "Panda"]}
  ]
}

To access arrays inside arrays, use a for-in loop for each array:

Example

for (let i in myObj.cars) {
  x += "<h1>" + myObj.cars[i].name + "</h1>";
  for (let j in myObj.cars[i].models) {
    x += myObj.cars[i].models[j];
  }
}
Try it Yourself »

Property Attributes

All properties have a name. In addition they also have a value.

The value is one of the property's attributes.

Other attributes are: enumerable, configurable, and writable.

These attributes define how the property can be accessed (is it readable?, is it writable?)

In JavaScript, all attributes can be read, but only the value attribute can be changed (and only if the property is writable).

( ECMAScript 5 has methods for both getting and setting all property attributes)


Prototype Properties

JavaScript objects inherit the properties of their prototype.

The delete keyword does not delete inherited properties, but if you delete a prototype property, it will affect all objects inherited from the prototype.