How can I check that two objects have the same set of property names?

流过昼夜 提交于 2019-12-28 01:49:20

问题


I am using node, mocha, and chai for my application. I want to test that my returned results data property is the same "type of object" as one of my model objects (Very similar to chai's instance). I just want to confirm that the two objects have the same sets of property names. I am specifically not interested in the actual values of the properties.

Let's say I have the model Person like below. I want to check that my results.data has all the same properties as the expected model does. So in this case, Person which has a firstName and lastName.

So if results.data.lastName and results.data.firstName both exist, then it should return true. If either one doesn't exist, it should return false. A bonus would be if results.data has any additional properties like results.data.surname, then it would return false because surname doesn't exist in Person.

This model

function Person(data) {
  var self = this;
  self.firstName = "unknown";
  self.lastName = "unknown";

  if (typeof data != "undefined") {
     self.firstName = data.firstName;
     self.lastName = data.lastName;
  }
}

回答1:


You can serialize simple data to check for equality:

data1 = {firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith'};
data2 = {firstName: 'Jane', lastName: 'Smith'};
JSON.stringify(data1) === JSON.stringify(data2)

This will give you something like

'{firstName:"John",lastName:"Smith"}' === '{firstName:"Jane",lastName:"Smith"}'

As a function...

function compare(a, b) {
  return JSON.stringify(a) === JSON.stringify(b);
}
compare(data1, data2);

EDIT

If you're using chai like you say, check out http://chaijs.com/api/bdd/#equal-section

EDIT 2

If you just want to check keys...

function compareKeys(a, b) {
  var aKeys = Object.keys(a).sort();
  var bKeys = Object.keys(b).sort();
  return JSON.stringify(aKeys) === JSON.stringify(bKeys);
}

should do it.




回答2:


2 Here a short ES6 variadic version:

function objectsHaveSameKeys(...objects) {
   const allKeys = objects.reduce((keys, object) => keys.concat(Object.keys(object)), []);
   const union = new Set(allKeys);
   return objects.every(object => union.size === Object.keys(object).length);
}

A little performance test (MacBook Pro - 2,8 GHz Intel Core i7, Node 5.5.0):

var x = {};
var y = {};

for (var i = 0; i < 5000000; ++i) {
    x[i] = i;
    y[i] = i;
}

Results:

objectsHaveSameKeys(x, y) // took  4996 milliseconds
compareKeys(x, y)               // took 14880 milliseconds
hasSameProps(x,y)               // after 10 minutes I stopped execution



回答3:


If you want to check if both objects have the same properties name, you can do this:

function hasSameProps( obj1, obj2 ) {
  return Object.keys( obj1 ).every( function( prop ) {
    return obj2.hasOwnProperty( prop );
  });
}

var obj1 = { prop1: 'hello', prop2: 'world', prop3: [1,2,3,4,5] },
    obj2 = { prop1: 'hello', prop2: 'world', prop3: [1,2,3,4,5] };

console.log(hasSameProps(obj1, obj2));

In this way you are sure to check only iterable and accessible properties of both the objects.

EDIT - 2013.04.26:

The previous function can be rewritten in the following way:

function hasSameProps( obj1, obj2 ) {
    var obj1Props = Object.keys( obj1 ),
        obj2Props = Object.keys( obj2 );

    if ( obj1Props.length == obj2Props.length ) {
        return obj1Props.every( function( prop ) {
          return obj2Props.indexOf( prop ) >= 0;
        });
    }

    return false;
}

In this way we check that both the objects have the same number of properties (otherwise the objects haven't the same properties, and we must return a logical false) then, if the number matches, we go to check if they have the same properties.

Bonus

A possible enhancement could be to introduce also a type checking to enforce the match on every property.




回答4:


If you want deep validation like @speculees, here's an answer using deep-keys (disclosure: I'm sort of a maintainer of this small package)

// obj1 should have all of obj2's properties
var deepKeys = require('deep-keys');
var _ = require('underscore');
assert(0 === _.difference(deepKeys(obj2), deepKeys(obj1)).length);

// obj1 should have exactly obj2's properties
var deepKeys = require('deep-keys');
var _ = require('lodash');
assert(0 === _.xor(deepKeys(obj2), deepKeys(obj1)).length);

or with chai:

var expect = require('chai').expect;
var deepKeys = require('deep-keys');
// obj1 should have all of obj2's properties
expect(deepKeys(obj1)).to.include.members(deepKeys(obj2));
// obj1 should have exactly obj2's properties
expect(deepKeys(obj1)).to.have.members(deepKeys(obj2));



回答5:


Here is my attempt at validating JSON properties. I used @casey-foster 's approach, but added recursion for deeper validation. The third parameter in function is optional and only used for testing.

//compare json2 to json1
function isValidJson(json1, json2, showInConsole) {

    if (!showInConsole)
        showInConsole = false;

    var aKeys = Object.keys(json1).sort();
    var bKeys = Object.keys(json2).sort();

    for (var i = 0; i < aKeys.length; i++) {

        if (showInConsole)
            console.log("---------" + JSON.stringify(aKeys[i]) + "  " + JSON.stringify(bKeys[i]))

        if (JSON.stringify(aKeys[i]) === JSON.stringify(bKeys[i])) {

            if (typeof json1[aKeys[i]] === 'object'){ // contains another obj

                if (showInConsole)
                    console.log("Entering " + JSON.stringify(aKeys[i]))

                if (!isValidJson(json1[aKeys[i]], json2[bKeys[i]], showInConsole)) 
                    return false; // if recursive validation fails

                if (showInConsole)
                    console.log("Leaving " + JSON.stringify(aKeys[i]))

            }

        } else {

            console.warn("validation failed at " + aKeys[i]);
            return false; // if attribute names dont mactch

        }

    }

    return true;

}



回答6:


If you are using underscoreJs then you can simply use _.isEqual function and it compares all keys and values at each and every level of hierarchy like below example.

var object = {"status":"inserted","id":"5799acb792b0525e05ba074c","data":{"workout":[{"set":[{"setNo":1,"exercises":[{"name":"hjkh","type":"Reps","category":"Cardio","set":{"reps":5}}],"isLastSet":false,"index":0,"isStart":true,"startDuration":1469689001989,"isEnd":true,"endDuration":1469689003323,"speed":"00:00:01"}],"setType":"Set","isSuper":false,"index":0}],"time":"2016-07-28T06:56:52.800Z"}};

var object1 = {"status":"inserted","id":"5799acb792b0525e05ba074c","data":{"workout":[{"set":[{"setNo":1,"exercises":[{"name":"hjkh","type":"Reps","category":"Cardio","set":{"reps":5}}],"isLastSet":false,"index":0,"isStart":true,"startDuration":1469689001989,"isEnd":true,"endDuration":1469689003323,"speed":"00:00:01"}],"setType":"Set","isSuper":false,"index":0}],"time":"2016-07-28T06:56:52.800Z"}};

console.log(_.isEqual(object, object1));//return true

If all the keys and values for those keys are same in both the objects then it will return true, otherwise return false.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14368596/how-can-i-check-that-two-objects-have-the-same-set-of-property-names

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