1๐
โ
You can use $.each()
function also, and use jQuery.parseJSON(YourJsonDataSet)
var xArray = [];
$(document).ready(function(){
var data = jQuery.parseJSON('[{"x": "0","y": "35"}, {"x": "1","y": "6"}, {"x": "2","y": "3"}, {"x":"3","y": "11"}, {"x": "4","y": "2"}]');
$.each(data,function(index, value){
console.log("X - "+ value.x + " and Y - " +value.y)
xArray.push(value.x);
});
alert(xArray.join())
})
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
0๐
Use JQuery like this:
$.each(data['graph_data'],function(index,data){
console.log(data.x);
console.log(data.y);
})
0๐
You can either iterate with plain loop statements like for
, or as you use jQuery, utilize $.each.
var i;
for (i = 0; i < data.graph_data.length; i += 1) {
// data.graph_data[i].x
// data.graph_data[i].y
}
OR
$.each(data.graph_data, function(item) {
// item.x
// item.y
});
In modern browsers which allows EcmaScript 6, you can use Array.forEach
as @Mamun answered. To see if you can use it in your browser, check it out at https://caniuse.com/#search=foreach
0๐
However you derive that array as an object you can then iterate it. Not sure if this does answer your question.
var mythings = [{
"x": "0",
"y": "35"
}, {
"x": "1",
"y": "6"
}, {
"x": "2",
"y": "3"
}, {
"x": "3",
"y": "11"
}, {
"x": "4",
"y": "2"
}];
for (var i = 0; i < mythings.length; i++) {
console.log("y:", mythings[i].y);
console.log("x:", mythings[i]["x"]);
}
// access via keys
for (var n = 0; n < mythings.length; n++) {
var keyNames = Object.keys(mythings[n]);
console.log(keyNames);
for (var name of keyNames) {
console.log(name, mythings[n][name]);
var value = mythings[n][name];
console.log(value);
}
}
Source:stackexchange.com