An easy but safe string-keyed store
Don't stuff things into objects. Use a dict
instead.
The problem
You're probably used to stuffing things into objects:
var hash = {};
hash["foo"] = "bar";
console.log("foo" in hash ? hash["foo"] : "not there");
However this doesn't always work, because your naïve hashes inherit from
Object.prototype
:
var hash = {};
console.log("hasOwnProperty" in hash);
Even worse, the magic __proto__
property can really ruin your day:
var hash = {};
var anotherObject = { foo: "bar" };
hash["__proto__"] = anotherObject;
console.log("foo" in hash);
console.log("__proto__" in hash);
Usually you're smart enough to avoid silly key names like "hasOwnProperty"
, "__proto__"
, and all the rest. But sometimes you want to
store user input in your hashes. Uh-oh…
dict is the solution
Just do an npm install dict
and you're good to go:
var dict = require("dict");
var d = dict();
d.set("foo", "bar");
console.log(d.get("foo", "not there"));
console.log(d.has("hasOwnProperty"));
var anotherObject = { baz: "qux" };
d.set("__proto__", anotherObject);
console.log(d.has("baz"));
console.log(d.has("__proto__"));
Featuring
- A lightweight ES6-inspired API:
get
, set
, has
, delete
. get
accepts a second argument as a fallback for if the key isn't present (like Mozilla's WeakMap
).- Doesn't let you get away with being dumb: if you pass a non-string as a key, you're going to get a
TypeError
. - A full suite of unit tests using mocha and chai:
npm test
awaits you.
See Also
- rauschma/strmap for something a bit more full-featured (albeit exposing its internals everywhere, if you care about that).
- dherman/dictjs if you live in an ES6 world.
- es-lab's StringMap.js if you can deal with the lack of npm support.
- es6-shim's
Map
if you want more than just strings for your keys.