2.4 KiB
2.4 KiB
propertyNamesIn
Return an array of an object's own and inherited enumerable and non-enumerable property names.
Usage
var propertyNamesIn = require( '@stdlib/utils/property-names-in' );
propertyNamesIn( obj )
Returns an array
of an object's own and inherited enumerable and non-enumerable property names.
var obj = {
'a': 1,
'b': 2
};
var keys = propertyNamesIn( obj );
// e.g., returns [ 'a', 'b', ... ]
Notes
- Name order is not guaranteed, as
object
key enumeration is not specified according to the ECMAScript specification. In practice, however, most engines use insertion order to sort anobject
's keys, thus allowing for deterministic extraction. - In contrast to the built-in
Object.getOwnPropertyNames()
, if providednull
orundefined
, the function returns an emptyarray
, rather than throwing an error.
Examples
var defineProperty = require( '@stdlib/utils/define-property' );
var propertyNamesIn = require( '@stdlib/utils/property-names-in' );
function Foo() {
this.beep = 'boop';
this.a = {
'b': 'c'
};
defineProperty( this, 'baz', {
'value': 'qux',
'configurable': true,
'writable': true,
'enumerable': false
});
return this;
}
Foo.prototype.foo = [ 'bar' ];
var obj = new Foo();
var keys = propertyNamesIn( obj );
console.log( keys );
// e.g., => [ 'beep', 'a', 'baz', 'foo', ... ]