Difference between using bracket (`[]`) and dot (`.`) notation [duplicate]
Solution 1:
Accessing members with .
is called dot notation. Accessing them with []
is called bracket notation.
The dot notation only works with property names which are valid identifier names [spec], so basically any name that would also be a valid variable name (a valid identifier, see also What characters are valid for JavaScript variable names?) and any reserved keyword [spec].
Bracket notation expects an expression which evaluates to a string (or can be coerced to a string), so you can use any character sequence as property name. There are no limits to what a string can contain.
Examples:
obj.foo; // valid
obj.else // valid, reserved keywords are valid identifier names
obj.42 // invalid, identifier names cannot start with numbers
obj.3foo // invalid, ""
obj.foo-bar // invalid, `-` is not allowed in identifier names
obj[42] // valid, 42 will be coerced to "42"
obj["--"] // valid, any character sequence is allowed
obj[bar] // valid, will evaluate the variable `bar` and
// use its value as property name
Use bracket notation:
- When the property name is contained in a variable, e.g.
obj[foo]
. - The property name contains characters not permitted in identifiers, e.g. starts with a digit†, or contains a space or dash (
-
), e.g.obj["my property"]
.
Use dot notation: In all other situations.
There is a caveat though regarding reserved keywords. While the specification permits to use them as property names and with the dot notation, not all browsers or tools respect this (notably older IE versions). So the best solution in my opinion is to avoid using reserved keywords for property names or use bracket notation if you cannot.
†: That's also the reason why you can only use bracket notation to access array elements. Identifiers cannot start with digits, and hence cannot consist only of digits.
Solution 2:
You should use .
when you know the name of the property
var object = {};
object.property = 'whatever';
, use []
when the name of the property is contained in a variable
var object = {};
var property = 'another-property';
object[property] = 'whatever';
As @DCoder added certain object properties cannot be accessed without using the []
notation because their names break the syntax. E.g. properties named class
, default
, or data-prop-value
Solution 3:
Also why doesn't . operator allow the index property? I really want full reason. Thank you.
Well if that was possible, consider:
var a = 0.5;
Did you mean the number 0.5
or access the 5
element of the number?
See:
Number.prototype[5] = 3;
0[5] //3
0.5 // 0.5
If you allowed the syntax 0.5
to be equal to 0[5]
, then how do you know what you mean?
It is however possible to use numbers directly with object literal:
var a = {
0: 3,
1: 5
};