As others have pointed out:
obj.fn2 = function(){ ... };
Note that if "fn2" is not a valid identifier, you must instead use the 'array' notation for the object:
obj["fn2"] = function(){ ... };
obj["!! crazy-names#allowed?!"] = function(){ ... };
This is also how you would do it if you had the name of the property stored in a variable:
var propName = "fn2";
obj[propName] = function(){ ... };
If you want to test if a property exists for an object, you can use the in
operator:
if ("fn2" in obj){ ... }
If you want to remove a property from an object, use the delete
keyword:
var o = { a:42 };
console.log( "a" in o ); // true
delete o.a; // Or delete o["a"]
console.log( "a" in o ); // false
To iterate over all properties in an object, use the in
operator in a for loop. Be sure to var
the variable so that it isn't global:
var o = { a:42, b:17 };
var allPropertyNames = [];
var allPropertyValues = [];
for (var propName in o){
// If you don't do this test, propName might be a property inherited
// by this object, and not a property on the object itself.
if (o.hasOwnProperty(propName)){
allPropertyNames.push(propName);
allPropertyValues.push(o[propName]);
}
}
console.log( allPropertyNames ); // [ "a", "z" ]
console.log( allPropertyValues ); // [ 42, 17 ]
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