Javascript collection

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南笙 2020-12-12 09:49

sorry for noobie question. Can you explain please, what is the difference between:

1. var a = [];
   a[\'b\'] = 1;

2. var a = {};
   a[\'b\'] = 1;


        
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  • 2020-12-12 10:00

    I would use an array of objects:

    collection = [ 
        { "key":"first key", "value":"first value" }, 
        { "key":"second key", "value":"second value" } 
    ];
    

    etc

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  • 2020-12-12 10:04

    1) Is an Array 2) Is an Object

    With Array all is usual as in other languages

    With Object also. - You can get value a.b == 1 - But in JS you can also get value with such syntax a["b"] == 1

    • This could be usefull when key look like something this "some key", in this case you can't use "chaining"
    • also this usefull if key is the variable

    you can write like this

        function some(f){
    var Object = {name: "Boo", age: "foo"}, key;
    if(f == true){
       key = "name";
    }else{
       key = "age";
    }
     return Object[key];
    }
    

    but I want to use it as collection, which I have to choose?

    This depends of what data you want to store

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  • 2020-12-12 10:14

    Literals

    The [] and {} are called the array and object literals respectively.

    var x = [] is short for var x = new Array();

    and var y = {} is short for var y = new Object();

    Arrays

    Arrays are structures with a length property. You can access values via their numeric index.

    var x = [] or var x = new Array();
    x[0] = 'b';
    x[1] = 'c';
    

    And if you want to list all the properties you do:

    for(var i = 0; i < x.length; i++)
    console.log(x[i]);// numeric index based access.
    

    Performance tricks and gotchas

    1. Inner-caching the length property

    The standard array iteration:

    for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
        // do stuff
    };
    

    Little known fact: In the above scenario, the arr.length property is read at every step of the for loop. Just like any function you call there:

    for (var i = 0; i < getStopIndex(); i++) {
         // do stuff
    };
    

    This decreases performance for no reason. Inner caching to the rescue:

    for (var i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
         // enter code here
    };
    

    Here's proof of the above.

    2. Don't specify the Array length in the constructor.

    // doing this:
    var a = new Array(100);
    // is very pointless in JS. It will result in an array with 100 undefined values.
    
    // not even this:
    var a = new Array();
    // is the best way.
    
    var a = [];
    // using the array literal is the fastest and easiest way to do things.
    

    Test cases for array definition are available here.

    3. Avoid using Array.prototype.push(arr.push)

    If you are dealing with large collections, direct assignment is faster than using the Array.prototype.push(); method.

    myArray[i] = 0; is faster than myArray.push(0);, according to jsPerf.com test cases.

    4. It is wrong to use arrays for associative assignments.

    The only reason why it works is because Array extends the Object class inside the core of the JS language. You can just as well use a Date(); or RegEx(); object for instance. It won't make a difference. x['property'] = someValue MUST always be used with Objects.

    Arrays should only have numeric indexes. SEE THIS, the Google JS development guidelines! Avoid for (x in arr) loops or arr['key'] = 5;.

    This can be easily backed up, look HERE for an example.

    var x = [];
    console.log(x.prototype.toString.call);
    

     will output: [object Array]

    This reveals the core language's 'class' inheritance pattern.  

    var x = new String();
    console.log(x.prototype.toString.call);
    

    will output [object String].

    5. Getting the minimum and maximum from an array.

    A little known, but really powerful trick:

    function arrayMax(arr) {
        return Math.max.apply(Math, arr);
    };
    

    , respectively:

    function arrayMin(arr) {
        return Math.min.apply(Math, arr);
    };
    

    Objects

    With an object you can only do:

    var y = {} or var y = new Object();

    y['first'] = 'firstValue' is the same as y.first = 'firstValue', which you can't do with an array. Objects are designed for associative access with String keys.

    And the iteration is something like this:

    for (var property in y) {
        if (y.hasOwnProperty(property)) {
            console.log(y.property);
        };
    };
    

    Performance tricks and gotchas

    1. Checking if an object has a property.

    Most people use Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty. Unfortunately that often gives erroneous results leading to unexpected bugs.

    Here's a good way to do it:

    function containsKey(obj, key) {
        return typeof obj[key] !== 'undefined';
    };
    

    2. Replacing switch statements.

    One of the simple but efficient JS tricks is switch replacement.

    switch (someVar) {
        case 'a':
            doSomething();
            break;
        case 'b':
            doSomethingElse();
            break;
        default:
            doMagic();
            break;
    };
    

    In most JS engines the above is painfully slow. When you are looking at three possible outcomes, it doesn't make a difference, but what if you had tens or hundreds?

    The above can easily be replaced with an object. Don't add the trailing (), this is not executing the functions, but simply storing references to them:

    var cases = {
        'a': doSomething,
        'b': doSomethingElse,
        'c': doMagic
    };
    

    Instead of the switch:

    var x = ???;
    if (containsKey(cases, x)) {
        cases[x]();
    } else {
        console.log("I don't know what to do!");
    };
    

    3. Deep-cloning made easy.

    function cloneObject(obj) {
       var tmp = {};
       for (var key in obj) {
           tmp[key] = fastDeepClone(obj[key];
       };
       return tmp;
    }
    
    function cloneArr(arr) {
       var tmp = [];
       for (var i = 0, len = arr.length; i < len; i++) {
         tmp[i] = fastDeepClone(arr[i]);
       }
       return tmp;
    }
    
    
    function deepClone(obj) {
       return JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(obj));
    };
    
    function isArray(obj) {
       return obj instanceof Array;
    }
    
    function isObject(obj) {
      var type = typeof obj;
      return type === 'object' && obj !== null || type === 'function';
    }
    
    function fastDeepClone(obj) {
      if (isArray(obj)) {
        return cloneArr(obj);
      } else if (isObject(obj)) {
        return cloneObject(obj);
      } else {
        return obj;
      };
    };
    

    HERE is the deep clone function in action.

    Auto-boxing

    As a dynamically typed language, JavaScript is limited in terms of native object types:

    • Object
    • Array
    • Number
    • Boolean
    • Date
    • RegEx
    • Error

    Null is not a type, typeof null is object.

    What's the catch? There is a strong distinction between primitive and non-primitive objects.

    var s = "str";
    var s2 = new String("str");
    

    They do the same thing, you can call all string methods on s and s2. Yet:

    type of s == "string"; // raw data type
    type of s2  == "object" // auto-boxed to non-primitive wrapper type
    s2.prototype.toString.call == "[object String]";
    

    You may hear in JS everything is an object. That's not exactly true, although it's a really easy mistake to make.

    In reality there are 2 types, primitives and objects, and when you call s.indexOf("c"), the JS engine will automatically convert s to its non-primitive wrapper type, in this case object String, where all the methods are defined on the String.prototype.

    This is called auto-boxing. The Object.prototype.valueOf(obj) method is a way to force the cast from primitive to non-primitive. It's the same behaviour a language like Java introduces for many of it's own primitives, specifically the pairs: int - Integer, double - Double, float - Float, etc.

    Why should you care?

    Simple:

    function isString(obj) {
       return typeof obj === "string";
    }
    isString(s); // true
    isString(s2); // false
    

    So if s2 was created with var s2 = new String("test") you are getting a false negative, even for an otherwise conceivably simple type check. More complex objects also bring with themselves a heavy performance penalty.

    A micro-optimization as some would say, but the results are truly remarkable, even for extremely simple things such as string initialisation. Let's compare the following two in terms of performance:

    var s1 = "this_is_a_test" 
    

    and

    var s2 = new String("this_is_a_test")
    

    You will probably expected matching performance across the board, but rather surprisingly the latter statement using new String is 92% slower than the first one, as proven here.

    Functions

    1. Default parameters

    The || operator is the simplest possible way of defaulting. Why does it work? Because of truthy and falsy values.

    When evaluated in a logical condition, undefined and null values will autocast to false.

    A simple example(code HERE):

    function test(x) {
       var param = x || 5;
       // do stuff with x
    };
    

    2. OO JS

    The most important thing to understand is that the JavaScript this object is not immutable. It is simply a reference that can be changed with great ease.

    In OO JS, we rely on the new keyword to guarantee implicit scope in all members of a JS Class. Even so, you can easily change the scope, via Function.prototype.call and Function.prototype.apply.

    Another very important thing is the Object.prototype. Non-primitive values nested on an objects prototype are shared, while primitive ones are not.

    Code with examples HERE.

    A simple class definition:

    function Size(width, height) {
        this.width = width;
        this.height = height;
    };
    

    A simple size class, with two members, this.width and this.height.

    In a class definition, whatever has this in front of it, will create a new reference for every instance of Size.

    Adding methods to classes and why the "closure" pattern and other "fancy name pattern" are pure fiction

    This is perhaps where the most malicious JavaScript anti-patterns are found.

    We can add a method to our Size class in two ways.

    Size.prototype.area = function() {
       return this.width * this.height;
    };
    

    Or:

    function Size2(width, height) {
       this.width = width;
       this.height = height;
       this.area = function() {
          return this.width * this.height;
       }
    }
    
    var s = new Size(5, 10);
    var s2 = new Size2(5, 10);
    
    
    
    var s3 = new Size2(5, 10);
    var s4 = new Size(5, 10);
     // Looks identical, but lets use the reference equality operator to test things:
    s2.area === s3.area // false
    s.area === s4.area // true
    

    The area method of Size2 is created for every instance. This is completely useless and slow, A LOT slower. 89% to be exact. Look HERE.

    The above statement is valid for about 99% of all known "fancy name pattern". Remember the single most important thing in JS, all those are nothing more than fiction.

    There are strong architectural arguments that can be made, mostly revolved around data encapsulation and the usage of closures.

    Such things are unfortunately absolutely worthless in JavaScript, the performance loss simply isn't worth it. We are talking about 90% and above, it's anything but negligible.

    3. Limitations

    Because prototype definitions are shared among all instances of a class, you won't be able to put a non-primitive settings object there.

    Size.prototype.settings = {};
    

    Why? size.settings will be the same for every single instance. So what's with the primitives?

    Size.prototype.x = 5; // won't be shared, because it's a primitive.
    // see auto-boxing above for primitive vs non-primitive
    // if you come from the Java world, it's the same as int and Integer.
    

    The point:

    The average JS guy will write JS in the following way:

    var x = {
        doStuff: function(x) {
        },
        doMoreStuff: 5,
        someConstant: 10
    }
    

    Which is fine (fine = poor quality, hard to maintain code), as long as you understand that is a Singleton object, and those functions should only be used in global scope without referencing this inside them.

    But then it gets to absolutely terrible code:

    var x = {
       width: 10,
       height: 5
    }
    var y = {
       width: 15,
       height: 10
    }
    

    You could have gotten away with: var x = new Size(10, 5); var y = new Size(15, 5);.

    Takes longer to type, you need to type the same thing every time. And again, it's A LOT SLOWER. Look HERE.

    Poor standards throughout

    This can be seen almost anywhere:

       function() {
          // some computation
          var x = 10 / 2;
          var y = 5;
          return {
             width: x,
             height: y
          }
        }
    

    Again with the alternative:

    function() {
        var x = 10 / 2;
        var y = 5;
        return new Size(10, 5);
    };
    

    The point: USE CLASSES WHEREVER APPROPRIATE!!

    Why? Example 1 is 93% Slower. Look HERE. The examples here are trivial, but they illustrate something being ignored in JS, OO.

    It's a solid rule of thumb not to employ people who think JS doesn't have classes and to get jobs from recruiters talking about "Object Orientated" JS.

    Closures

    A lot of people prefer them to the above because it gives them a sense of data encapsulation. Besides the drastic 90% performance drop, here's something equally easy to overlook. Memory leaks.

    function Thing(someParam) {
       this.someFn = function() {
         return someParam;
       }
    }
    

    You've just created a closure for someParam. Why is this bad? First, it forces you to define class methods as instance properties, resulting in the big performance drop.

    Second, it eats up memory, because a closure will never get dereferenced. Look here for proof. Sure, you do get some fake data encapsulation, but you use three times the memory with a 90% performance drop.

    Or you can add @private and get a way with an underscore function name.

    Other very common ways of generating closures:

    function bindSomething(param) {
       someDomElement.addEventListener("click", function() {
         if (param) //do something
         else // do something else
       }, false);
    }
    

    param is now a closure! How do you get rid of it? There are various tricks, some found here. The best possible approach, albeit more rigorous is to avoid using anonymous functions all-together, but this would require a way to specify scopes for event callbacks.

    Such a mechanism is only available in Google Closure, as far as I know.

    The singleton pattern

    Ok, so what do I do for singletons? I don't want to store random references. Here's a wonderful idea shamelessly stolen from Google Closure's base.js

    /**
     * Adds a {@code getInstance} static method that always return the same instance
     * object.
     * @param {!Function} ctor The constructor for the class to add the static
     *     method to.
     */
    function addSingletonGetter(ctor) {
      ctor.getInstance = function() {
        if (ctor.instance_) {
          return ctor.instance_;
        }
        return ctor.instance_ = new ctor;
      };
    };
    

    It's Java-esque, but it's a simple and powerful trick. You can now do:

    project.some.namespace.StateManager = function() {
       this.x_ = 5;
    };
    project.some.namespace.prototype.getX = function() { return x; }
    addSingletonGetter(project.some.namespace.StateManager);
    

    How is this useful? Simple. In all other files, every time you need to reference project.some.namespace.StateManager, you can write: project.some.namespace.StateManager.getInstance(). This is more awesome than it looks.

    You can have global state with the benefits of a class definition (inheritance, stateful members, etc.) and without polluting the global namespace.

    The single instance pattern

    You may now be tempted to do this:

    function Thing() {
       this.someMethod = function() {..}
    }
    // and then use it like this:
    Thing.someMethod();
    

    That is another big no-no in JavaScript. Remember, the this object is only guaranteed to be immutable when the new keyword is used. The magic behind the above code is interesting. this is actually the global scope, so without meaning to you are adding methods to the global object. And you guessed it, those things never get garbage collected.

    There is nothing telling JavaScript to use something else. A function on it's own doesn't have a scope. Be really careful what you do with static properties. To reproduce a quote I once read, the JavaScript global object is like a public toilet. Sometimes you have no choice but to go there, yet try and minimise contact with the surfaces as much as possible.

    Either stick to the above Singleton pattern or use a settings object nested under a namespace.

    Garbage collection in JavaScript

    JavaScript is a garbage collected language, but JavaScript GC is often rather poorly understood. The point is again speed. This is perhaps all too familiar.

    // This is the top of a JavaScript file.
    var a = 5;
    var b = 20;
    var x = {};//blabla
    
    // more code
    function someFn() {..}
    

    That is bad, poor performance code. The reason is simple. JS will garbage collect a variable and free up the heap memory it holds only when that variable gets de-scoped, e.g. there are no references to it anywhere in the memory.

    For example:

    function test(someArgs) {
       var someMoreStuf = // a very big complex object;
    }
    test();
    

    Three things:

    • Function arguments are transformed into local definitions
    • Inner declarations are hoisted.
    • All the heap memory allocated for inner variables is freed up when the function finishes execution.

    Why? Because they no longer belong to the "current" scope. They are created, used, and destroyed. There are no closures either, so all the memory you've used is freed up through garbage collection.

    For that reason, you should never, your JS files should never look like this, as global scope will just keep polluting memory.

    var x = 5;
    var y = {..}; //etc;
    

    Alright, now what?

    Namespaces.

    JS doesn't have namespaces per say, so this isn't exactly a Java equivalent, yet from a codebase administration perspective you get what you want.

    var myProject = {};
    myProject.settings = {};
    myProject.controllers = {};
    myProject.controlls.MainController = function() {
        // some class definition here
    }
    

    Beautiful. One global variable. Proper project structure. With a build phase, you can split your project across files, and get a proper dev environment.

    There's no limit to what you can achieve from here.

    Count your libraries

    Having had the pleasure of working on countless codebases, the last and most important argument is to be very mindful of your code dependencies. I've seen programmers casually adding jQuery into the mix of the stack for a simple animation effect and so forth.

    Dependency and package management is something the JavaScript world hadn't addresses for the longest time, until the creation of tools like Bower. Browsers are still somewhat slow, and even when they're fast, internet connections are slow.

    In the world of Google for instance, they go through the lengths of writing entire compilers just to save bytes, and that approach is in many ways the right mentality to have in web programming. And I uphold Google in very high regard as their JS library powers apps like Google Maps, which are not only insanely complex, but also work everywhere.

    Arguably JavaScript has an immense variety of tools available, given its popularity, accessibility, and to some extent very low quality bar the ecosystem as a whole is willing to accept.

    For Hacker News subscribers, a day doesn't go by without a new JS library out there, and they are certainly useful but one cannot ignore the fact that many of them re-implement the exact same concerns without any strong notion of novelty or any killer ideas and improvements.

    It's a strong rule of thumb to resist the urge of mixing in all the new toys before they have the time to prove their novelty and usefulness to the entire ecosystem and to strongly distinguish between Sunday coding fun and production deployments.

    If your <head></head> tag is longer than this post, you're doing it all wrong.

    Testing your knowledge of JavaScript

    A few "perfectionist" level tests:

    • http://perfectionkills.com/javascript-quiz/, thanks to Kangax.

    • http://javascript-puzzlers.herokuapp.com/

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  • 2020-12-12 10:16

    In JavaScript all objects are associative arrays. In first case you create an array in the second case you created an empty object which is array too :).

    So in JS you can work with any object as with array:

    var a = {};
    a["temp"] = "test";
    

    And as object:

    var a = {};
    a.temp = "test";
    
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  • 2020-12-12 10:24

    A collection of objects? Use this notation (JavaScript arrays):

    var collection = [ {name:"object 1"} , {name:"object 2"} , {name:"object 3"} ];
    

    To put a new element into your collection:

    collection.push( {name:"object 4"} );
    
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