Creating an object called car:
function car(temp){
this.brand=temp[0];
this.color=temp[1];
this.year=temp[2];
}
var temp = ['Skoda', 'Red', '2012'];
car = new car(temp);
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Setting object and stringify after reading from localStorage:
localStorage.setItem('car',car); car = localStorage.getItem('car'); car = JSON.stringify(car);car after stringify—————–> [object Object] at file:///android_asset/www/…
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Stringify object and Setting object to localStorage after it:
localStorage.setItem('car',JSON.stringify(car));
car = localStorage.getItem('car');
car after stringify—————–> “{\”brand\”:\”Skoda\”,\”color\”:\”Red\”,\”year\”:\”2012\”}” at file:///android_asset/www/…
Question 1: Why does it make difference what is the order when you stringify the object?
Question 2: Why can’t I use stringified object like that:
08-21 11:49:14.860: I/Web Console(9642): car after stringify-----------------> {"brand":"Skoda","color":"Red","year":"2012"}
console.log(“car.brand—–>” +car.brand);
car.name—–>undefined
From my understanding you can’t use your stringified object once it’s been stringified because it’s no longer an object. It’s a String.
So when you try to do
car.brandon the string there is no propertybrand.Personally, good practice in my opinion would be to do.
This means the car object is now not a string but an object.
When doing this also write to local storage using stringify and read using parse.