0

I have this 2 array of objects like this:

objects [ { countMedias: 2 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 3 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 2 } ]
listePlayliste [ { nom_playlist: 'bbbb' },
  { nom_playlist: 'ccc' },
  { nom_playlist: 'aaaa' },
  { nom_playlist: 'xxxx' },
  { nom_playlist: 'resttttttttt' } ]

I want to fusion both of them to get something like this :

Result [ { nom_playlist: 'bbbb', countMedias: 2 },
  { nom_playlist: 'ccc', countMedias: 1  },
  { nom_playlist: 'aaaa', countMedias: 3 },
  { nom_playlist: 'xxxx', countMedias: 1 },
  { nom_playlist: 'resttttttttt', countMedias: 2 } ]

I tried this but it is not what I want actually:

    Array.prototype.push.apply(json,objects); 
0

3 Answers 3

2

Maybe something like this:

objects.map((object, index) => Object.assign(object, listePlayliste[index]))

Don't try to use this on a large array size though. It's not that fast.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

1 Comment

Just be sure that you are fine modifying the target object. Otherwise you would need instead Object.assign({}, object, listePlayliste[index]) in order to not modify the original object
1

use map. Iterate over one of the array and return the object, which holds the current obj and object from other array using index.

const objects = [{
    countMedias: 2
  },
  {
    countMedias: 1
  },
  {
    countMedias: 3
  },
  {
    countMedias: 1
  },
  {
    countMedias: 2
  }
];

const listePlayliste = [{
    nom_playlist: 'bbbb'
  },
  {
    nom_playlist: 'ccc'
  },
  {
    nom_playlist: 'aaaa'
  },
  {
    nom_playlist: 'xxxx'
  },
  {
    nom_playlist: 'resttttttttt'
  }
];

const output = objects.map((obj, i) => ({
  ...obj,
  ...listePlayliste[i]
}));
console.log(output);

Comments

0

Similar to objects.map(), a for loop will also work, but please be noted that, Object.assign() will modify the original array. PFB code snippet:

objects = [ { countMedias: 2 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 3 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 2 } ];
listePlayliste = [ { nom_playlist: 'bbbb' },
  { nom_playlist: 'ccc' },
  { nom_playlist: 'aaaa' },
  { nom_playlist: 'xxxx' },
  { nom_playlist: 'resttttttttt' } ];


for (let i=0; i<objects.length; i++) {
  Object.assign(objects[i], listePlayliste[i]);
}

console.log(objects);

To avoid modifying original array, we can use Spread syntax. PFB code snippet:

objects = [ { countMedias: 2 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 3 },
  { countMedias: 1 },
  { countMedias: 2 } ];
listePlayliste = [ { nom_playlist: 'bbbb' },
  { nom_playlist: 'ccc' },
  { nom_playlist: 'aaaa' },
  { nom_playlist: 'xxxx' },
  { nom_playlist: 'resttttttttt' } ];

var result = [];
for (let i=0; i<objects.length; i++) {
  result.push({ ...objects[i], ...listePlayliste[i] })
}

console.log(result);
console.log(objects);

Comments

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.