That's not JSON. It's just Javascript objects, and has nothing at all to do with JSON.
You can use brackets to set the properties dynamically. Example:
var obj = {};
obj['name'] = value;
obj['anotherName'] = anotherValue;
This gives exactly the same as creating the object with an object literal like this:
var obj = { name : value, anotherName : anotherValue };
If you have already added the object to the
ips
collection, you use one pair of brackets to access the object in the collection, and another pair to access the propery in the object:ips[ipId] = {};
ips[ipId]['name'] = value;
ips[ipId]['anotherName'] = anotherValue;
Notice similarity with the code above, but that you are just using
ips[ipId]
instead of obj
.
You can also get a reference to the object back from the collection, and use that to access the object while it remains in the collection:
ips[ipId] = {};
var obj = ips[ipId];
obj['name'] = value;
obj['anotherName'] = anotherValue;
You can use string variables to specify the names of the properties:
var name = 'name';
obj[name] = value;
name = 'anotherName';
obj[name] = anotherValue;
It's value of the variable (the string) that identifies the property, so while you use
obj[name]
for both properties in the code above, it's the string in the variable at the moment that you access it that determines what property will be accessed.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét