Change the case of the keys of a javascript object (from underscore to came case, for instance).
var obj = {
firstName: "paulo",
lastName: "vieira",
createdAt: "2015-01-05 19:27:00",
groups: [
{
id: 11,
groupName: "x"
},
{
id: 11,
groupName: "y"
}
]
}
changeCaseKeys(obj, "underscored");
After the call, the keys of obj
will be in underscored case (the values will be untouched):
{
first_name: "paulo",
last_name: "vieira",
created_at: "2015-01-05 19:27:00",
groups: [
{
id: 11,
group_name: "x"
},
{
id: 12,
group_name: "y"
}
]
}
Useful if you're acessing a Postgres database in Node. The convention in Postgres is to use underscore case for the names of the table columns. The data from a query (using the pg module) will be an array of objects, where each object represents a row and the keys are the column names.
This function will convert the keys to camel case (and vice-versa). This way you can peacefully have columns named "first_name", "last_name", etc, and the objects with the query data will have the keys "firstName", "lastName", etc.
Install with npm. Depends on underscore and underscore.string.
npm install change-case-keys
The module exports a function which accepts 3 parameters:
var changeCaseKeys = require("change-case-keys");
var maxRecursionLevel = 2;
changeCaseKeys(obj, "underscored", maxRecursionLevel);
This module uses underscore.string to make the case conversion. The second argument should be a string value with the name of the method from underscore.string that will be used.
Usually it should be one of these:
- underscored (change the keys to
underscore_case
) - camelize (change the keys to
camelCase
) - dasherize (change the keys to
dash-case
)
The third argument is optional and can be used to control how deep you want to go to change the keys. To change the keys of only the top most properties you should use:
changeCaseKeys(obj, "underscored", 1);