In my ReactApp, I keep in state list of users (fetched from backend API). It is called “currentUsers”.
class Lobby extends React.Component {
constructor(props) {
super(props);
this.state = {
currentUsers: ["TestUser1", "TestUser2"],
buttonList: [],
}
}
I would like to populate buttonList to have array of object where array will look like this(example):
[{
"TestUser1": {
"inviteButtonValue": "Invite",
"chatButtonValue": "Chat"
}
},
{"TestUser2": {
"inviteButtonValue": "Invite",
"chatButtonValue": "Chat"
}
}]
There is my main function.
produceButtonValues = (currentUsersList) => {
let inputList = currentUsersList
.map( (nickname) => {
return {
nickname: {
"inviteButtonValue": "Invite",
"chatButtonValue": "Chat"
}
};
}
);
this.setState({buttonList: inputList});
}
I tried to use map but it looks like I cannot get array element as object key, i.e. “TestUser1” etc. but got “nickname” instead (seen in “Components” tab in Firefox DevTools Add-on)
...
{nickname: {
"inviteButtonValue": "Invite",
"chatButtonValue": "Chat"
}
}
...
I trigger my function as below:
componentDidMount() {
this.produceButtonValues(this.state.currentUsers);
How to solve it?
By the way: when I run console.log(this.state.buttonList); just after setState, I still see empty array as it was made in initial state. Why?
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Answer
It’s called Property accessors
You use it like this:
currentUsersList.map(nickname => ({
[nickname]: {
inviteButtonValue: Invite,
chatButtonValue: Chat
}
});