Vinícius Ernani de Carvalho 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
..
lib 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
.jscsrc 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
.jshintrc 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
.npmignore 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
.travis.yml 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
LICENSE 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
README.md 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
example.js 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden
package.json 6c4544a079 Create the backend 5 jaren geleden

README.md

undefsafe

Simple function for retrieving deep object properties without getting "Cannot read property 'X' of undefined"

Can also be used to safely set deep values.

Usage

var object = {
  a: {
    b: {
      c: 1,
      d: [1,2,3],
      e: 'remy'
    }
  }
};

console.log(undefsafe(object, 'a.b.e')); // "remy"
console.log(undefsafe(object, 'a.b.not.found')); // undefined

Demo: https://jsbin.com/eroqame/3/edit?js,console

Setting

var object = {
  a: {
    b: [1,2,3]
  }
};

// modified object
var res = undefsafe(object, 'a.b.0', 10);

console.log(object); // { a: { b: [10, 2, 3] } }
console.log(res); // 1 - previous value

Star rules in paths

As of 1.2.0, undefsafe supports a * in the path if you want to search all of the properties (or array elements) for a particular element.

The function will only return a single result, either the 3rd argument validation value, or the first positive match. For example, the following github data:

const githubData = {
        commits: [{
          modified: [
            "one",
            "two"
          ]
        }, /* ... */ ]
      };

// first modified file found in the first commit
console.log(undefsafe(githubData, 'commits.*.modified.0'));

// returns `two` or undefined if not found
console.log(undefsafe(githubData, 'commits.*.modified.*', 'two'));