users
object, this could look like:
```js
for (let user in users) {
console.log(user);
}
// logs:
Alan
Jeff
Sarah
Ryan
```
In this statement, we defined a variable user
, and as you can see, this variable was reset during each iteration to each of the object's keys as the statement looped through the object, resulting in each user's name being printed to the console.
NOTE: Objects do not maintain an ordering to stored keys like arrays do; thus a key's position on an object, or the relative order in which it appears, is irrelevant when referencing or accessing that key.
countOnline
which accepts one argument (a users object). Use a for...in statement within this function to loop through the users object passed into the function and return the number of users whose online
property is set to true
. An example of a users object which could be passed to countOnline
is shown below. Each user will have an online
property with either a true
or false
value.
```js
{
Alan: {
online: false
},
Jeff: {
online: true
},
Sarah: {
online: false
}
}
```
countOnline
should use a `for in` statement to iterate through the object keys of the object passed to it.
testString: assert(code.match(/for\s*\(\s*(var|let|const)\s+[a-zA-Z_$]\w*\s+in\s+[a-zA-Z_$]\w*\s*\)\s*{/));
- text: 'The function countOnline
should return 1
when the object { Alan: { online: false }, Jeff: { online: true }, Sarah: { online: false } }
is passed to it'
testString: assert(countOnline(usersObj1) === 1);
- text: 'The function countOnline
should return 2
when the object { Alan: { online: true }, Jeff: { online: false }, Sarah: { online: true } }
is passed to it'
testString: assert(countOnline(usersObj2) === 2);
- text: 'The function countOnline
should return 0
when the object { Alan: { online: false }, Jeff: { online: false }, Sarah: { online: false } }
is passed to it'
testString: assert(countOnline(usersObj3) === 0);
```