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.