Is there any way to turn an existing Javascript object into an array without creating a new separate array?












7















There are a lot of mentions on differentes readings that arrays are a special class of object in Javascript. For example here:



https://www.codingame.com/playgrounds/6181/javascript-arrays---tips-tricks-and-examples



So, and since an object is a collection of properties (or keys) and values, I was thinking if there is a way to start with an object and ends with an array (in the sense that the method Array.isArray() returns true for that object emulating an array). I have started looking at the arrays properties:






let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





So I tried to emulate the same using an object:






let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





But Array.isArray(arrEmulation) still returns false. First, I want to apologize if this is an stupid question, but is there any way I can manually convert an object to array adding special properties (or keys) to it?




Please, note I don't want to know how to convert object to array, I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array.











share|improve this question









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  • 1





    Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

    – jmargolisvt
    2 hours ago






  • 7





    I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

    – Tyler Roper
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    @jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago











  • @TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

    – david
    1 hour ago
















7















There are a lot of mentions on differentes readings that arrays are a special class of object in Javascript. For example here:



https://www.codingame.com/playgrounds/6181/javascript-arrays---tips-tricks-and-examples



So, and since an object is a collection of properties (or keys) and values, I was thinking if there is a way to start with an object and ends with an array (in the sense that the method Array.isArray() returns true for that object emulating an array). I have started looking at the arrays properties:






let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





So I tried to emulate the same using an object:






let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





But Array.isArray(arrEmulation) still returns false. First, I want to apologize if this is an stupid question, but is there any way I can manually convert an object to array adding special properties (or keys) to it?




Please, note I don't want to know how to convert object to array, I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array.











share|improve this question









New contributor




SmaGal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1





    Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

    – jmargolisvt
    2 hours ago






  • 7





    I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

    – Tyler Roper
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    @jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago











  • @TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

    – david
    1 hour ago














7












7








7


1






There are a lot of mentions on differentes readings that arrays are a special class of object in Javascript. For example here:



https://www.codingame.com/playgrounds/6181/javascript-arrays---tips-tricks-and-examples



So, and since an object is a collection of properties (or keys) and values, I was thinking if there is a way to start with an object and ends with an array (in the sense that the method Array.isArray() returns true for that object emulating an array). I have started looking at the arrays properties:






let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





So I tried to emulate the same using an object:






let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





But Array.isArray(arrEmulation) still returns false. First, I want to apologize if this is an stupid question, but is there any way I can manually convert an object to array adding special properties (or keys) to it?




Please, note I don't want to know how to convert object to array, I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array.











share|improve this question









New contributor




SmaGal is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












There are a lot of mentions on differentes readings that arrays are a special class of object in Javascript. For example here:



https://www.codingame.com/playgrounds/6181/javascript-arrays---tips-tricks-and-examples



So, and since an object is a collection of properties (or keys) and values, I was thinking if there is a way to start with an object and ends with an array (in the sense that the method Array.isArray() returns true for that object emulating an array). I have started looking at the arrays properties:






let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





So I tried to emulate the same using an object:






let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





But Array.isArray(arrEmulation) still returns false. First, I want to apologize if this is an stupid question, but is there any way I can manually convert an object to array adding special properties (or keys) to it?




Please, note I don't want to know how to convert object to array, I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array.







let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





let arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arr));
console.log(Array.isArray(arr));





let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





let arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, "length":6};
console.log(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));






javascript arrays object






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share|improve this question









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share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 48 mins ago









CertainPerformance

84.3k154169




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asked 2 hours ago









SmaGalSmaGal

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Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1





    Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

    – jmargolisvt
    2 hours ago






  • 7





    I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

    – Tyler Roper
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    @jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago











  • @TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

    – david
    1 hour ago














  • 1





    Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

    – jmargolisvt
    2 hours ago






  • 7





    I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

    – Tyler Roper
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    @jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago











  • @TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

    – SmaGal
    2 hours ago








  • 1





    Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

    – david
    1 hour ago








1




1





Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

– jmargolisvt
2 hours ago





Possible duplicate of How to convert an Object {} to an Array of key-value pairs in JavaScript

– jmargolisvt
2 hours ago




7




7





I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

– Tyler Roper
2 hours ago







I don't believe the suggested duplicate addresses this portion of OP's question: "I just want to understand which are those special things that make possible to interpret an object like an array." OP, perhaps this MIT article might be of use. It's the one referenced in MDN's own isArray() documentation... though I'm not sure it really hits the detail you're looking for.

– Tyler Roper
2 hours ago






1




1





@jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

– SmaGal
2 hours ago





@jmargolisvt I don't want to know how to convert an object to array, I want to undesrtand what are the properties or keys that I need to add to an object so they are interpreted like an array.

– SmaGal
2 hours ago













@TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

– SmaGal
2 hours ago







@TylerRoper thanks, I'm going to give it a read...

– SmaGal
2 hours ago






1




1





Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

– david
1 hour ago





Looking at the MDN polyfill (developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…) perhaps you can try getting Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array]. I'm not sure what the definition of that function is though.

– david
1 hour ago












4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















3














I don't think it's possible, in the strictest sense, given the standard specification. Looking up Array.isArray:




If the value of the [[Class]] internal property of arg is "Array", then return true.




So, for Array.isArray(arrEmulation) to return true, you must somehow modify the [[Class]] of the object to be Array, rather than Object. But, looking at ES5's 8.6.2 Object Internal Properties and Methods regarding [[Class]]:




Note: This specification defines no ECMAScript language operators or built-in functions that permit a program to modify an object’s [[Class]] or [[Prototype]] internal properties or to change the value of [[Extensible]] from false to true. Implementation specific extensions that modify [[Class]], [[Prototype]] or [[Extensible]] must not violate the invariants defined in the preceding paragraph.




Also:




Note that this specification does not provide any means for a program to access that value except through Object.prototype.toString




So, the official specification doesn't provide a way to do it in ES5 - if there was a way to do it, it would be non-standard and implementation dependent.



That said, unless you absolutely need to use Array.isArray or have Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array], you can still use Object.setPrototypeOf to set the prototype of arrEmulation to Array.prototype, allowing you to use array methods on the object and have instanceof Array return true:






const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
console.log(value);
});
// Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
// Unlike a true array:
console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

console.log('-----');

// although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
// it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





But note that you should avoid using Object.setPrototypeOf in real code:




Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, a very slow operation, in every browser and JavaScript engine. The effects on performance of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to simply the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(...) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. If you care about performance you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create().




(of course, Object.create involves creating a new object, which is different from what you want to do, which is to change the existing arrEmulation object)



There doesn't look to be a way to do it in ES6+ either - its text is somewhat similar, but not identical. Specifically, for Array.isArray to return true, the object in question needs to be an "Array exotic object" (or a Proxy that points to one) - but setPrototypeOf only sets the prototype, neither it nor any other method can make the object actually become an Array exotic object (which looks like it has to be natively constructed by the interpreter, and is not emulatable enough).






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago



















1














Javascript is all about prototypal inheritance:




Prototype Inheritance
All JavaScript objects inherit properties and methods from a
prototype:



Date objects inherit from Date.prototype Array objects inherit from
Array.prototype Person objects inherit from Person.prototype The
Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype inheritance chain:



Date objects, Array objects, and Person objects inherit from
Object.prototype.




As seen here isArray is an function in prototype chain of the Array object.



An alternative as suggested in MDN Array.isArray() alternate if isArray is not present is:



if (!Array.isArray) {
Array.isArray = function(arg) {
return Object.prototype.toString.call(arg) === '[object Array]';
};
}


So the type is determined by the prototype chain instead of what value it returns.




Similarly, as per Tio Zed's answer



const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Array.isArray(newArray)



What it really does is just change to prototype from that of object to that of an Array.






share|improve this answer


























  • Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

    – Kaiido
    45 mins ago











  • I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    39 mins ago











  • Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

    – Kaiido
    35 mins ago











  • The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    2 mins ago





















0














You can convert anything that is close enough to an array by using Array.from().
In your example, we could just call:



const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, length: 6};

const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Array.isArray(newArray) // true





share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

    – eric99
    1 hour ago











  • @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

    – SmaGal
    34 mins ago











  • @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

    – eric99
    28 mins ago



















0














   //converting object to array.
var person = {
name: 'manav',
age: '21'
}

var answer = function () {
return Object.keys(person).map(i => person[i])
}

console.log(answer());


simplest way to do it.






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    4 Answers
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    4 Answers
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    3














    I don't think it's possible, in the strictest sense, given the standard specification. Looking up Array.isArray:




    If the value of the [[Class]] internal property of arg is "Array", then return true.




    So, for Array.isArray(arrEmulation) to return true, you must somehow modify the [[Class]] of the object to be Array, rather than Object. But, looking at ES5's 8.6.2 Object Internal Properties and Methods regarding [[Class]]:




    Note: This specification defines no ECMAScript language operators or built-in functions that permit a program to modify an object’s [[Class]] or [[Prototype]] internal properties or to change the value of [[Extensible]] from false to true. Implementation specific extensions that modify [[Class]], [[Prototype]] or [[Extensible]] must not violate the invariants defined in the preceding paragraph.




    Also:




    Note that this specification does not provide any means for a program to access that value except through Object.prototype.toString




    So, the official specification doesn't provide a way to do it in ES5 - if there was a way to do it, it would be non-standard and implementation dependent.



    That said, unless you absolutely need to use Array.isArray or have Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array], you can still use Object.setPrototypeOf to set the prototype of arrEmulation to Array.prototype, allowing you to use array methods on the object and have instanceof Array return true:






    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





    But note that you should avoid using Object.setPrototypeOf in real code:




    Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, a very slow operation, in every browser and JavaScript engine. The effects on performance of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to simply the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(...) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. If you care about performance you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create().




    (of course, Object.create involves creating a new object, which is different from what you want to do, which is to change the existing arrEmulation object)



    There doesn't look to be a way to do it in ES6+ either - its text is somewhat similar, but not identical. Specifically, for Array.isArray to return true, the object in question needs to be an "Array exotic object" (or a Proxy that points to one) - but setPrototypeOf only sets the prototype, neither it nor any other method can make the object actually become an Array exotic object (which looks like it has to be natively constructed by the interpreter, and is not emulatable enough).






    share|improve this answer


























    • Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago
















    3














    I don't think it's possible, in the strictest sense, given the standard specification. Looking up Array.isArray:




    If the value of the [[Class]] internal property of arg is "Array", then return true.




    So, for Array.isArray(arrEmulation) to return true, you must somehow modify the [[Class]] of the object to be Array, rather than Object. But, looking at ES5's 8.6.2 Object Internal Properties and Methods regarding [[Class]]:




    Note: This specification defines no ECMAScript language operators or built-in functions that permit a program to modify an object’s [[Class]] or [[Prototype]] internal properties or to change the value of [[Extensible]] from false to true. Implementation specific extensions that modify [[Class]], [[Prototype]] or [[Extensible]] must not violate the invariants defined in the preceding paragraph.




    Also:




    Note that this specification does not provide any means for a program to access that value except through Object.prototype.toString




    So, the official specification doesn't provide a way to do it in ES5 - if there was a way to do it, it would be non-standard and implementation dependent.



    That said, unless you absolutely need to use Array.isArray or have Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array], you can still use Object.setPrototypeOf to set the prototype of arrEmulation to Array.prototype, allowing you to use array methods on the object and have instanceof Array return true:






    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





    But note that you should avoid using Object.setPrototypeOf in real code:




    Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, a very slow operation, in every browser and JavaScript engine. The effects on performance of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to simply the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(...) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. If you care about performance you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create().




    (of course, Object.create involves creating a new object, which is different from what you want to do, which is to change the existing arrEmulation object)



    There doesn't look to be a way to do it in ES6+ either - its text is somewhat similar, but not identical. Specifically, for Array.isArray to return true, the object in question needs to be an "Array exotic object" (or a Proxy that points to one) - but setPrototypeOf only sets the prototype, neither it nor any other method can make the object actually become an Array exotic object (which looks like it has to be natively constructed by the interpreter, and is not emulatable enough).






    share|improve this answer


























    • Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago














    3












    3








    3







    I don't think it's possible, in the strictest sense, given the standard specification. Looking up Array.isArray:




    If the value of the [[Class]] internal property of arg is "Array", then return true.




    So, for Array.isArray(arrEmulation) to return true, you must somehow modify the [[Class]] of the object to be Array, rather than Object. But, looking at ES5's 8.6.2 Object Internal Properties and Methods regarding [[Class]]:




    Note: This specification defines no ECMAScript language operators or built-in functions that permit a program to modify an object’s [[Class]] or [[Prototype]] internal properties or to change the value of [[Extensible]] from false to true. Implementation specific extensions that modify [[Class]], [[Prototype]] or [[Extensible]] must not violate the invariants defined in the preceding paragraph.




    Also:




    Note that this specification does not provide any means for a program to access that value except through Object.prototype.toString




    So, the official specification doesn't provide a way to do it in ES5 - if there was a way to do it, it would be non-standard and implementation dependent.



    That said, unless you absolutely need to use Array.isArray or have Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array], you can still use Object.setPrototypeOf to set the prototype of arrEmulation to Array.prototype, allowing you to use array methods on the object and have instanceof Array return true:






    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





    But note that you should avoid using Object.setPrototypeOf in real code:




    Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, a very slow operation, in every browser and JavaScript engine. The effects on performance of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to simply the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(...) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. If you care about performance you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create().




    (of course, Object.create involves creating a new object, which is different from what you want to do, which is to change the existing arrEmulation object)



    There doesn't look to be a way to do it in ES6+ either - its text is somewhat similar, but not identical. Specifically, for Array.isArray to return true, the object in question needs to be an "Array exotic object" (or a Proxy that points to one) - but setPrototypeOf only sets the prototype, neither it nor any other method can make the object actually become an Array exotic object (which looks like it has to be natively constructed by the interpreter, and is not emulatable enough).






    share|improve this answer















    I don't think it's possible, in the strictest sense, given the standard specification. Looking up Array.isArray:




    If the value of the [[Class]] internal property of arg is "Array", then return true.




    So, for Array.isArray(arrEmulation) to return true, you must somehow modify the [[Class]] of the object to be Array, rather than Object. But, looking at ES5's 8.6.2 Object Internal Properties and Methods regarding [[Class]]:




    Note: This specification defines no ECMAScript language operators or built-in functions that permit a program to modify an object’s [[Class]] or [[Prototype]] internal properties or to change the value of [[Extensible]] from false to true. Implementation specific extensions that modify [[Class]], [[Prototype]] or [[Extensible]] must not violate the invariants defined in the preceding paragraph.




    Also:




    Note that this specification does not provide any means for a program to access that value except through Object.prototype.toString




    So, the official specification doesn't provide a way to do it in ES5 - if there was a way to do it, it would be non-standard and implementation dependent.



    That said, unless you absolutely need to use Array.isArray or have Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation) to return [object Array], you can still use Object.setPrototypeOf to set the prototype of arrEmulation to Array.prototype, allowing you to use array methods on the object and have instanceof Array return true:






    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





    But note that you should avoid using Object.setPrototypeOf in real code:




    Warning: Changing the [[Prototype]] of an object is, by the nature of how modern JavaScript engines optimize property accesses, a very slow operation, in every browser and JavaScript engine. The effects on performance of altering inheritance are subtle and far-flung, and are not limited to simply the time spent in the Object.setPrototypeOf(...) statement, but may extend to any code that has access to any object whose [[Prototype]] has been altered. If you care about performance you should avoid setting the [[Prototype]] of an object. Instead, create a new object with the desired [[Prototype]] using Object.create().




    (of course, Object.create involves creating a new object, which is different from what you want to do, which is to change the existing arrEmulation object)



    There doesn't look to be a way to do it in ES6+ either - its text is somewhat similar, but not identical. Specifically, for Array.isArray to return true, the object in question needs to be an "Array exotic object" (or a Proxy that points to one) - but setPrototypeOf only sets the prototype, neither it nor any other method can make the object actually become an Array exotic object (which looks like it has to be natively constructed by the interpreter, and is not emulatable enough).






    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));





    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, "length":6};
    Object.setPrototypeOf(arrEmulation, Array.prototype);

    console.log(arrEmulation instanceof Array);
    arrEmulation.forEach((value) => {
    console.log(value);
    });
    // Internal [[Class]] property is still `Object`, though:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    // Unlike a true array:
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call());

    console.log('-----');

    // although you can set the `toStringTag` to the string 'Array' in ES6+,
    // it is cosmetic only and does not pass an `Array.isArray` test:
    arrEmulation[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Array';
    console.log(Object.prototype.toString.call(arrEmulation));
    console.log(Array.isArray(arrEmulation));






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 1 hour ago

























    answered 1 hour ago









    CertainPerformanceCertainPerformance

    84.3k154169




    84.3k154169













    • Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago



















    • Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago

















    Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago





    Thanks dude, this information gives me some more clarity to understand the differences between and standard object and an array. Just to you know, I'm not really looking to emulate an array with an object, but just to understand they differences and this helps me. +1!

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago













    1














    Javascript is all about prototypal inheritance:




    Prototype Inheritance
    All JavaScript objects inherit properties and methods from a
    prototype:



    Date objects inherit from Date.prototype Array objects inherit from
    Array.prototype Person objects inherit from Person.prototype The
    Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype inheritance chain:



    Date objects, Array objects, and Person objects inherit from
    Object.prototype.




    As seen here isArray is an function in prototype chain of the Array object.



    An alternative as suggested in MDN Array.isArray() alternate if isArray is not present is:



    if (!Array.isArray) {
    Array.isArray = function(arg) {
    return Object.prototype.toString.call(arg) === '[object Array]';
    };
    }


    So the type is determined by the prototype chain instead of what value it returns.




    Similarly, as per Tio Zed's answer



    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray)



    What it really does is just change to prototype from that of object to that of an Array.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

      – Kaiido
      45 mins ago











    • I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      39 mins ago











    • Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

      – Kaiido
      35 mins ago











    • The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      2 mins ago


















    1














    Javascript is all about prototypal inheritance:




    Prototype Inheritance
    All JavaScript objects inherit properties and methods from a
    prototype:



    Date objects inherit from Date.prototype Array objects inherit from
    Array.prototype Person objects inherit from Person.prototype The
    Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype inheritance chain:



    Date objects, Array objects, and Person objects inherit from
    Object.prototype.




    As seen here isArray is an function in prototype chain of the Array object.



    An alternative as suggested in MDN Array.isArray() alternate if isArray is not present is:



    if (!Array.isArray) {
    Array.isArray = function(arg) {
    return Object.prototype.toString.call(arg) === '[object Array]';
    };
    }


    So the type is determined by the prototype chain instead of what value it returns.




    Similarly, as per Tio Zed's answer



    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray)



    What it really does is just change to prototype from that of object to that of an Array.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

      – Kaiido
      45 mins ago











    • I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      39 mins ago











    • Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

      – Kaiido
      35 mins ago











    • The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      2 mins ago
















    1












    1








    1







    Javascript is all about prototypal inheritance:




    Prototype Inheritance
    All JavaScript objects inherit properties and methods from a
    prototype:



    Date objects inherit from Date.prototype Array objects inherit from
    Array.prototype Person objects inherit from Person.prototype The
    Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype inheritance chain:



    Date objects, Array objects, and Person objects inherit from
    Object.prototype.




    As seen here isArray is an function in prototype chain of the Array object.



    An alternative as suggested in MDN Array.isArray() alternate if isArray is not present is:



    if (!Array.isArray) {
    Array.isArray = function(arg) {
    return Object.prototype.toString.call(arg) === '[object Array]';
    };
    }


    So the type is determined by the prototype chain instead of what value it returns.




    Similarly, as per Tio Zed's answer



    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray)



    What it really does is just change to prototype from that of object to that of an Array.






    share|improve this answer















    Javascript is all about prototypal inheritance:




    Prototype Inheritance
    All JavaScript objects inherit properties and methods from a
    prototype:



    Date objects inherit from Date.prototype Array objects inherit from
    Array.prototype Person objects inherit from Person.prototype The
    Object.prototype is on the top of the prototype inheritance chain:



    Date objects, Array objects, and Person objects inherit from
    Object.prototype.




    As seen here isArray is an function in prototype chain of the Array object.



    An alternative as suggested in MDN Array.isArray() alternate if isArray is not present is:



    if (!Array.isArray) {
    Array.isArray = function(arg) {
    return Object.prototype.toString.call(arg) === '[object Array]';
    };
    }


    So the type is determined by the prototype chain instead of what value it returns.




    Similarly, as per Tio Zed's answer



    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray)



    What it really does is just change to prototype from that of object to that of an Array.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 40 mins ago

























    answered 1 hour ago









    Black MambaBlack Mamba

    2,76912139




    2,76912139













    • Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

      – Kaiido
      45 mins ago











    • I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      39 mins ago











    • Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

      – Kaiido
      35 mins ago











    • The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      2 mins ago





















    • Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

      – Kaiido
      45 mins ago











    • I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      39 mins ago











    • Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

      – Kaiido
      35 mins ago











    • The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

      – Black Mamba
      2 mins ago



















    Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

    – Kaiido
    45 mins ago





    Hum... nope. That's not what Array.isArray checks. That is a simple polyfill posted on an MDN article, it is in no way how any browser will implement it. Here is what the specs asks though they're not clear as to how the check is made to know if it is an Array exotic Object. And here is a proof that it's not how it is implemented: jsfiddle.net/f6182mkh

    – Kaiido
    45 mins ago













    I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    39 mins ago





    I edited my answer I just wanted to show that it all depends on prototypes and not the keys they see in the value. BTW thanks for correcting me. Please edit my answer if you still feel something wrong with my answer. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    39 mins ago













    Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

    – Kaiido
    35 mins ago





    Well even the prototype thing is not correct either: jsfiddle.net/vLrgdp86

    – Kaiido
    35 mins ago













    The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    2 mins ago







    The above I defined is currently used as a Polyfill in many borwsers that doesn't support it. I've searched about how it is currently officially implemented but got no success. It'll be helpful if you can provide me a doc for it. Here's a little detail about the Array.isArray I've been able to find. @Kaiido

    – Black Mamba
    2 mins ago













    0














    You can convert anything that is close enough to an array by using Array.from().
    In your example, we could just call:



    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, length: 6};

    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray) // true





    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

      – eric99
      1 hour ago











    • @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

      – SmaGal
      34 mins ago











    • @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

      – eric99
      28 mins ago
















    0














    You can convert anything that is close enough to an array by using Array.from().
    In your example, we could just call:



    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, length: 6};

    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray) // true





    share|improve this answer



















    • 1





      I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

      – eric99
      1 hour ago











    • @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

      – SmaGal
      34 mins ago











    • @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

      – eric99
      28 mins ago














    0












    0








    0







    You can convert anything that is close enough to an array by using Array.from().
    In your example, we could just call:



    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, length: 6};

    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray) // true





    share|improve this answer













    You can convert anything that is close enough to an array by using Array.from().
    In your example, we could just call:



    const arrEmulation = {0:0, 1:1, 2:2, 3:3, 4:4, 5:5, length: 6};

    const newArray = Array.from(arrEmulation) // [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
    Array.isArray(newArray) // true






    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 1 hour ago









    Tio ZedTio Zed

    404




    404








    • 1





      I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

      – eric99
      1 hour ago











    • @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

      – SmaGal
      34 mins ago











    • @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

      – eric99
      28 mins ago














    • 1





      I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

      – SmaGal
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

      – eric99
      1 hour ago











    • @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

      – SmaGal
      34 mins ago











    • @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

      – eric99
      28 mins ago








    1




    1





    I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago





    I'm not looking at how to convert object to array, but to understand they differences...

    – SmaGal
    1 hour ago




    1




    1





    @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

    – eric99
    1 hour ago





    @SmaGal, be fair - do you not say 'convert' in the question title?

    – eric99
    1 hour ago













    @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

    – SmaGal
    34 mins ago





    @eric99 the down-vote don't come from me. I just explained that I was not looking for that.

    – SmaGal
    34 mins ago













    @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

    – eric99
    28 mins ago





    @SmaGal my comment was a bit tongue-in-cheek. TioZed deserves some credit for his answer, given the question has now morphed into something more specific.

    – eric99
    28 mins ago











    0














       //converting object to array.
    var person = {
    name: 'manav',
    age: '21'
    }

    var answer = function () {
    return Object.keys(person).map(i => person[i])
    }

    console.log(answer());


    simplest way to do it.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














         //converting object to array.
      var person = {
      name: 'manav',
      age: '21'
      }

      var answer = function () {
      return Object.keys(person).map(i => person[i])
      }

      console.log(answer());


      simplest way to do it.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







           //converting object to array.
        var person = {
        name: 'manav',
        age: '21'
        }

        var answer = function () {
        return Object.keys(person).map(i => person[i])
        }

        console.log(answer());


        simplest way to do it.






        share|improve this answer













           //converting object to array.
        var person = {
        name: 'manav',
        age: '21'
        }

        var answer = function () {
        return Object.keys(person).map(i => person[i])
        }

        console.log(answer());


        simplest way to do it.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 46 mins ago









        Manav KothariManav Kothari

        12




        12






















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