I have an array like this and I want it to be flatted in order to generate an excel with it, but I can't get more than two levels of flat. This is my data:
[
{
"idClient":1,
"clientName":"Client One",
"numItems":72,
"projects":[
{
"idProject":1,
"projectName":"Project One",
"numItems":72,
"languages":[
{
"sourceLanguage":26,
"sourceLanguageName":"Spanish",
"numItems":72,
"targets":[
{
"targetLanguage":74,
"targetLanguageName":"English",
"numItems":36,
"numItemsSold":30,
},
{
"targetLanguage":20,
"targetLanguageName":"French",
"numItems":36,
"numItemsSold":7,
}
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"idClient":1,
"clientName":"Client One",
"numItems":50,
"projects":[
{
"idProject":1,
"projectName":"Project Two",
"numItems":50,
"languages":[
{
"sourceLanguage":26,
"sourceLanguageName":"Spanish",
"numItems":50,
"targets":[
{
"targetLanguage":74,
"targetLanguageName":"English",
"numItems":30,
"numItemsSold":3,
},
{
"targetLanguage":20,
"targetLanguageName":"French",
"numItems":20,
"numItemsSold":7,
}
]
}
]
}
]
}
]
What I want is generate a simple string list, with one row per target, something similar to this:
[
{"Client One", "Proyect One", "Spanish", "English", "36", "30" },
{"Client One", "Proyect One", "Spanish", "French", "36", "7" },
{"Client One", "Proyect Two", "Spanish", "English", "30", "3" },
{"Client One", "Proyect Two", "Spanish", "English", "20", "7" },
]
Looking on the internet and on stackoverflow, I found some interesting functions, like this one, but i cannot go beyond the languages property:
const fn = arr =>
arr.flatMap(({ projects, ...rest }) =>
projects.map(o => ({
...rest,
...o,
}))
);
Any help would be apprecited. Thanks in advace
CodePudding user response:
I think you will have to flatMap all the arrays above targets
, like this:
let data = [
{
"idClient":1,
"clientName":"Client One",
"numItems":72,
"projects":[
{
"idProject":1,
"projectName":"Project One",
"numItems":72,
"languages":[
{
"sourceLanguage":26,
"sourceLanguageName":"Spanish",
"numItems":72,
"targets":[
{
"targetLanguage":74,
"targetLanguageName":"English",
"numItems":36,
"numItemsSold":30,
},
{
"targetLanguage":20,
"targetLanguageName":"French",
"numItems":36,
"numItemsSold":7,
}
]
}
]
}
]
},
{
"idClient":1,
"clientName":"Client One",
"numItems":50,
"projects":[
{
"idProject":1,
"projectName":"Project Two",
"numItems":50,
"languages":[
{
"sourceLanguage":26,
"sourceLanguageName":"Spanish",
"numItems":50,
"targets":[
{
"targetLanguage":74,
"targetLanguageName":"English",
"numItems":30,
"numItemsSold":3,
},
{
"targetLanguage":20,
"targetLanguageName":"French",
"numItems":20,
"numItemsSold":7,
}
]
}
]
}
]
}
]
const fn = arr =>
arr.flatMap(({ projects, ...rest }) =>
projects.flatMap(({languages, ...rest1}) =>
languages.flatMap(({targets, ...rest2}) => {
return targets.map(t => ({...t, ...rest, ...rest1, ...rest2}))
})
)
);
data = fn(data);
console.log(data);
This will give you flattened key-value pairs.