Using a string as an object reference-Collection of common programming errors
If you’re talking about the item1
part, you’re looking for:
myValue = myTestObject["item1"];
No need for eval
. (There almost never is.)
If you’re talking about getting at the myTestObject
variable using a “myTestObject” string, you want to refactor the code so you’re not doing that, rather than using eval
. Unfortunately the variable object used for symbol resolution within the function is not accessible directly. The refactor could just use an object explicitly:
var stringToObjectRef = function() {
var objects = {};
var myTestVar = "myTestObject";
objects.myTestObject = { 'item1' : 100, 'item2' : 12, 'item4' : 18 };
var myValue = objects[myTestVar].item1;
alert(myValue);
}();
Off-topic, I don’t recall precisely why, but if you’re going to execute that anonymous function immediately like that, you need to put the function expression in parentheses:
var x = (function() { return 5; })();
rather than
var x = function() { return 5; }();
Again, I don’t recall why, and whether it was because of an implementation bug in a popular interpreter or an actual requirement of the syntax.
Originally posted 2013-11-09 22:47:03.