
Security News
Deno 2.4 Brings Back deno bundle, Improves Dependency Management and Observability
Deno 2.4 brings back bundling, improves dependency updates and telemetry, and makes the runtime more practical for real-world JavaScript projects.
index-array-by
Advanced tools
A utility function to index arrays by any criteria.
indexBy(list, keyAccessors, multiItem = true)
import indexBy from 'index-array-by';
or using a script tag
<script src="//unpkg.com/index-array-by"></script>
Given an array
const people = [
{ name: 'Mary', surname: 'Jane', age: 28 },
{ name: 'John', surname: 'Smith', age: 24 },
{ name: 'John', surname: 'Doe', age: 32 }
];
Use indexBy
to index it by a given attribute (string type keyAccessor
) or any other custom criteria (function type keyAccessor
). You can also pass an array of keyAccessors
to retrieve a nested object recursively indexed by the multiple keys.
Use the third parameter (multiItem
) to indicate whether each key should point to a single item (unadvised if the keys are not unique) or an array of multiple items (default behavior).
indexBy(people, 'surname', false);
// Result:
{
Doe: { name: 'John', age: 32 },
Jane: { name: 'Mary', age: 28 },
Smith: { name: 'John', age: 24 }
}
indexBy(people, 'name', true);
// Result:
{
Mary: [ { surname: 'Jane', age: 28 } ],
John: [
{ surname: 'Smith', age: 24 },
{ surname: 'Doe', age: 32 }
]
}
indexBy(people, ({ name, surname }) => `${surname}, ${name}`, false);
// Result:
{
'Jane, Mary': { name: 'Mary', surname: 'Jane', age: 28 },
'Smith, John': { name: 'John', surname: 'Smith', age: 24 },
'Doe, John': { name: 'John', surname: 'Doe', age: 32 }
}
indexBy(people, ['name', 'surname'], false));
// Result:
{
Mary: { Jane: { age: 28 }},
John: { Smith: { age: 24 }, Doe: { age: 32 }}
}
indexBy(people, ({ age }) => `${Math.floor(age / 10) * 10}s`, true);
// Result:
{
'20s': [
{ name: 'Mary', surname: 'Jane', age: 28 },
{ name: 'John', surname: 'Smith', age: 24 },
],
'30s': [{ name: 'John', surname: 'Doe', age: 32 }]
}
The multiItem
parameter also accepts a transformation function with the method to reduce multiple items into a single one. In this case, it's keeping only the max age.
indexBy(people, 'name', items => Math.max(...items.map(item => item.age)));
// Result:
{
John: 32,
Mary: 28
}
A fourth optional parameter (flattenKeys
) (default: false
) allows you to receive a flat array structure instead of the default nested format, with each item formatted as { keys: [<ordered unique keys for the item>], vals: <single or multiple item> }
.
indexBy(people, ['name', 'surname'], true, true));
// Result:
[
{ keys: ['Mary', 'Jane'], vals: [{ age: 28 }] },
{ keys: ['John', 'Smith'], vals: [{ age: 24 }] },
{ keys: ['John', 'Doe'], vals: [{ age: 32 }] }
]
FAQs
A utility function to index arrays by any criteria
The npm package index-array-by receives a total of 91,492 weekly downloads. As such, index-array-by popularity was classified as popular.
We found that index-array-by demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Deno 2.4 brings back bundling, improves dependency updates and telemetry, and makes the runtime more practical for real-world JavaScript projects.
Security News
CVEForecast.org uses machine learning to project a record-breaking surge in vulnerability disclosures in 2025.
Security News
Browserslist-rs now uses static data to reduce binary size by over 1MB, improving memory use and performance for Rust-based frontend tools.