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Home/ Questions/Q 4033810
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T11:53:36+00:00 2026-05-20T11:53:36+00:00

I want to be able to pass a reference to an arbitrary function by

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I want to be able to pass a reference to an arbitrary function by name to another javascript function. If it’s just a global function, there is no problem:

function runFunction(funcName) {
   window[funcName]();
}

But suppose the function could be a member of an arbitrary object, e.g.:

object.property.somefunction = function() {
 //
}

runFunction("object.property.somefunction") does not work. I know I can do this:

window["object"]["property"]["somefunction"]()

So while could write code to parse a string and figure out the heirarchy this way, that seems like work 🙂 So I wondered if there’s any better way to go about this, other than using eval()

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T11:53:37+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 11:53 am

    Nope — other than using eval I do not know another way of walking down an object tree in JavaScript than to build a walker — fortunately, it is easy to do:

    /**
    * Walks down an object tree following a provided path. 
    * Throws an error if the path is invalid.
    * 
    * @argument obj {Object} The object to walk.
    * @argument path {String} The path to walk down the provided object.
    * @argument return_container {Boolean} Should walk return the last node *before* the tip 
    * (i.e my_object.my_node.my_other_node.my_last_node.my_attribute)
    * If `true` `my_last_node` will be returned, rather than the value for `my_attribute`.
    * @returns {Mixed} Object or the value of the last attribute in the path.
    */
    function walk_path(obj, path, return_container) {
        return_container = return_container || false;
        path = path_to_array(path, ".");
        var ln = path.length - 1, i = 0;
        while ( i < ln ) {
            if (typeof obj[path[i]] === 'undefined') {
                var err = new ReferenceError("The path " + path.join(".") + " failed at " + path[i] + ".");
                err.valid_path = path.slice(0,i);
                err.invalid_path = path.slice(i, ln+1);
                err.breaking_point = path[i];
                throw err;
            } else {
                var container = obj;
                obj = obj[path[i]];
                i++;
            }
        }
        // If we get down to the leaf node without errors let's return what was asked for.
        return return_container ? container : obj[path[i]];
    };
    
    /**
    * path_to_array
    *
    * @argument path {string} A path in one of the following formats:
    * `path/to/file`
    * `path\\to\\file`
    * `path.to.file`
    * `path to file`
    * @argument sep {string} optional A seperator for the path. (i.e. "/", ".", "---", etc.)
    *
    * If `sep` is not specified the function will use the first seperator it comes across as the path seperator.
    * The precedence is "/" then "\\" then "." and defaults to " "
    *
    * returns {Array} An array of each of the elements in the string ["path", "to", "file"]
    */
    function path_to_array(path, sep) {
        path = is_string(path) ? path : path + "";
        sep = is_string(sep) ? sep : 
                    path.indexOf("/") >= 0 ? "/" : 
                    path.indexOf("\\") >= 0 ? "\\" : 
                    path.indexOf(".") >= 0 ? "." : " ";
        /* Alternately use SLak's
        sep = is_string(sep) ? sep : /[ \\/.]/;
        if you want simpler code that will split on *any* of the
        delimiters by default. */
        return path.split(sep);
    }
    
    function is_string(s) { return typeof s === "string"; }
    

    Then just call it like so:

    walk_path(my_object, "path.to.my.function")();
    
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