1

I have a nested object:

myObject {
  "fshkj78gds": {
    "name": "Joe",
    "created_at": {
      "nanoseconds": 745000000,
      "seconds": 1645468219,
    },
    "updated_at": {
      "nanoseconds": 0,
      "seconds": 1645471800,
    },
  },
  "gsdg987": {
    "name": "Mike",
    "created_at": {
      "nanoseconds": 745000000,
      "seconds": 1645468219,
    },
    "updated_at": {
      "nanoseconds": 0,
      "seconds": 1645471800,
    },
  },
}

I would like to convert created_at and updated_at in each nested object to only return the seconds instead as a number like so:

myObject {
  "fshkj78gds": {
    "name": "Joe",
    "created_at": 1645468219,
    "updated_at": 1645471800,
  },
  "gsdg987": {
    "name": "Joe",
    "created_at": 1645468219,
    "updated_at": 1645471800,
  },
}

I am thinking I will need a mix of map and Object.assign as well as spread operator?

So far I got to:

Object.assign({}, myObject, Object.values(myObject).map((nestedObject) =>
  Object.assign({}, nestedObject, {...nestedObject, created_at: nestedObject.created_at.seconds})
))

But this generates an array of objects and doesn't keep the original structure. What's the proper way to do this?

4
  • Can you modify the object in place, or do you need to return a new object? Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 21:04
  • modifying the original is fine Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 21:05
  • To do it in place (modifying the original array and its original objects), use a for loop, adding a field Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 21:06
  • These are all great solutions, so it's hard to select which one is the right answer. I'm choosing @Barmar because it's the one I chose to use since I can modify the original object and in my use case ended up being the least verbose. Thank you all! Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 21:23

3 Answers 3

3

Use forEach() to iterate over the values and then just reassign the properties.

Object.values(myObject).forEach(item => {
    item.created_at = item.created_at.seconds;
    item.updated_at = item.updated_at.seconds;
});
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Comments

2

Using Object#fromEntries, Object#entries, and Array#map:

const myObject = {
  "fshkj78gds": {
    "name": "Joe",
    "created_at": { "nanoseconds": 745000000, "seconds": 1645468219 },
    "updated_at": { "nanoseconds": 0, "seconds": 1645471800 }
  },
  "gsdg987": {
    "name": "Mike",
    "created_at": { "nanoseconds": 745000000, "seconds": 1645468219 },
    "updated_at": { "nanoseconds": 0, "seconds": 1645471800 }
  }
};

const res = Object.fromEntries(
  Object.entries(myObject).map(([ key, value ]) => ([
    key,
    { ...value, 'created_at': value['created_at'].seconds, 'updated_at': value['updated_at'].seconds,  }
  ]))
);

console.log(res);

1 Comment

Very cool! This directly demonstrate all I asked about.
1
for (let key in obj) {
  obj[key].created_at = obj[key].created_at.seconds;
  obj[key].updated_at = obj[key].updated_at.seconds;
}

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