unique object identifier in javascript

I need to do some experiment and I need to know some kind of unique identifier for objects in javascript, so I can see if they are the same. I don't want to use equality operators, I need something like the id() function in python.

Does something like this exist ?


Update My original answer below was written 6 years ago in a style befitting the times and my understanding. In response to some conversation in the comments, a more modern approach to this is as follows:

    (function() {
        if ( typeof Object.id == "undefined" ) {
            var id = 0;

            Object.id = function(o) {
                if ( typeof o.__uniqueid == "undefined" ) {
                    Object.defineProperty(o, "__uniqueid", {
                        value: ++id,
                        enumerable: false,
                        // This could go either way, depending on your 
                        // interpretation of what an "id" is
                        writable: false
                    });
                }

                return o.__uniqueid;
            };
        }
    })();
    
    var obj = { a: 1, b: 1 };
    
    console.log(Object.id(obj));
    console.log(Object.id([]));
    console.log(Object.id({}));
    console.log(Object.id(/./));
    console.log(Object.id(function() {}));

    for (var k in obj) {
        if (obj.hasOwnProperty(k)) {
            console.log(k);
        }
    }
    // Logged keys are `a` and `b`

If you have archaic browser requirements, check here for browser compatibility for Object.defineProperty.

The original answer is kept below (instead of just in the change history) because I think the comparison is valuable.


You can give the following a spin. This also gives you the option to explicitly set an object's ID in its constructor or elsewhere.

    (function() {
        if ( typeof Object.prototype.uniqueId == "undefined" ) {
            var id = 0;
            Object.prototype.uniqueId = function() {
                if ( typeof this.__uniqueid == "undefined" ) {
                    this.__uniqueid = ++id;
                }
                return this.__uniqueid;
            };
        }
    })();
    
    var obj1 = {};
    var obj2 = new Object();
    
    console.log(obj1.uniqueId());
    console.log(obj2.uniqueId());
    console.log([].uniqueId());
    console.log({}.uniqueId());
    console.log(/./.uniqueId());
    console.log((function() {}).uniqueId());

Take care to make sure that whatever member you use to internally store the unique ID doesn't collide with another automatically created member name.


So far as my observation goes, any answer posted here can have unexpected side effects.

In ES2015-compatible enviroment, you can avoid any side effects by using WeakMap.

const id = (() => {
    let currentId = 0;
    const map = new WeakMap();

    return (object) => {
        if (!map.has(object)) {
            map.set(object, ++currentId);
        }

        return map.get(object);
    };
})();

id({}); //=> 1

Latest browsers provide a cleaner method for extending Object.prototype. This code will make the property hidden from property enumeration (for p in o)

For the browsers that implement defineProperty, you can implement uniqueId property like this:

(function() {
    var id_counter = 1;
    Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, "__uniqueId", {
        writable: true
    });
    Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, "uniqueId", {
        get: function() {
            if (this.__uniqueId == undefined)
                this.__uniqueId = id_counter++;
            return this.__uniqueId;
        }
    });
}());

For details, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/defineProperty