How to create an associative array in JavaScript literal notation

Wild Widow picture Wild Widow · May 30, 2016 · Viewed 75.7k times · Source

I understand that there are no associative arrays in JavaScript, only objects.

However I can create an array with string keys using bracket notation like this:

var myArray = [];
myArray['a'] = 200;
myArray['b'] = 300;
console.log(myArray); // Prints [a: 200, b: 300]

So I want to do the exact same thing without using bracket notation:

var myNewArray = [a: 200, b: 300]; // I am getting error - Unexpected token:

This does not work either:

var myNewArray = ['a': 200, 'b': 300]; // Same error. Why can I not create?

Answer

Lux picture Lux · May 30, 2016

JavaScript has no associative arrays, just objects. Even JavaScript arrays are basically just objects, just with the special thing that the property names are numbers (0,1,...).

So look at your code first:

var myArray = []; // Creating a new array object
myArray['a'] = 200; // Setting the attribute a to 200
myArray['b'] = 300; // Setting the attribute b to 300

It's important to understand that myArray['a'] = 200; is identical to myArray.a = 200;!

So to start with what you want: You can't create a JavaScript array and pass no number attributes to it in one statement.

But this is probably not what you need! Probably you just need a JavaScript object, what is basically the same as an associative array, dictionary, or map in other languages: It maps strings to values. And that can be done easily:

var myObj = {a: 200, b: 300};

But it's important to understand that this differs slightly from what you did. myObj instanceof Array will return false, because myObj is not an ancestor from Array in the prototype chain.