|
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
docs | ||
lib | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
forOwn
Invoke a function for each own enumerable property of an object.
Usage
var forOwn = require( '@stdlib/utils/for-own' );
forOwn( obj, fcn[, thisArg ] )
Invokes a function
for each own enumerable property of an object
.
function log( value, key ) {
console.log( '%s: %d', key, value );
}
var obj = {
'a': 1,
'b': 2,
'c': 3,
'd': 4
};
forOwn( obj, log );
/* e.g., =>
a: 1
b: 2
c: 3
d: 4
*/
The invoked function
is provided three arguments:
value
: object property valuekey
: object propertyobj
: the input object
To terminate iteration before visiting all properties, the provided function must explicitly return false
.
function log( value, key ) {
console.log( '%s: %d', key, value );
return false;
}
var obj = {
'a': 1,
'b': 2,
'c': 3,
'd': 4
};
forOwn( obj, log );
// e.g., => a: 1
To set the function execution context, provide a thisArg
.
function sum( value ) {
this.sum += value;
this.count += 1;
}
var obj = {
'a': 1,
'b': 2,
'c': 3,
'd': 4
};
var context = {
'sum': 0,
'count': 0
};
forOwn( obj, sum, context );
var mean = context.sum / context.count;
// returns 2.5
Notes
- The function returns the input
object
. - The function determines the list of own enumerable properties before invoking the provided function. Hence, any modifications made to the input
object
after calling this function (such as adding and removing properties) will not affect the list of visited properties. - Property iteration order is not guaranteed.
Examples
var fromCodePoint = require( '@stdlib/string/from-code-point' );
var forOwn = require( '@stdlib/utils/for-own' );
function update( value, key, obj ) {
console.log( '%s: %d', key, value );
obj[ key ] *= value;
}
var obj;
var key;
var i;
obj = {};
for ( i = 0; i < 26; i++ ) {
key = fromCodePoint( 97 + i );
obj[ key ] = i;
}
forOwn( obj, update );
console.log( obj );