JavaScript オブジェクトをループまたは列挙するにはどうすればよいですか?

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/684672

  •  22-08-2019
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質問

次のような JavaScript オブジェクトがあります。

var p = {
    "p1": "value1",
    "p2": "value2",
    "p3": "value3"
};

今、すべてをループしたいです p 要素 (p1, p2, p3...) そしてキーと値を取得します。どうやってやるの?

必要に応じて JavaScript オブジェクトを変更できます。私の最終的な目標は、いくつかのキーと値のペアをループすることであり、可能であれば使用を避けたいと考えています。 eval.

役に立ちましたか?

解決

使用できます for-in 他の人が示したようにループします。ただし、取得したキーがオブジェクトの実際のプロパティであり、プロトタイプから取得されたものではないことも確認する必要があります。

スニペットは次のとおりです。

var p = {
    "p1": "value1",
    "p2": "value2",
    "p3": "value3"
};

for (var key in p) {
    if (p.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
        console.log(key + " -> " + p[key]);
    }
}

他のヒント

のECMAScript 5の下には、 Object.keys()を組み合わせることができます Array.prototype.forEach()する

var obj = { first: "John", last: "Doe" };

Object.keys(obj).forEach(function(key) {
    console.log(key, obj[key]);
});

のECMAScript 6追加 for...of

for (const key of Object.keys(obj)) {
    console.log(key, obj[key]);
}

のECMAScript 8は Object.entries() に追加されます元のオブジェクトの各値をルックアップする必要が回避される:

Object.entries(obj).forEach(
    ([key, value]) => console.log(key, value)
);

あなたはfor...of、非構造、およびObject.entriesを組み合わせることができます:

for (const [key, value] of Object.entries(obj)) {
    console.log(key, value);
}

Object.keys()ループと同じ順序で両方Object.entries()for...inの反復特性が、プロトタイプチェーンを無視。唯一のオブジェクト自身の列挙可能性が反復されます。

あなたが使用する必要があるののためのインループ

しかし、ループのこの種を使用するので、ときに非常に注意してください。この意志プロトタイプチェーンに沿ってのループのすべてのプロパティの。

以下のためのインループ使用時に繰り返し処理の現在のプロパティは本当にあなたがチェックしているオブジェクトのプロパティである場合は、

そのため、常に決定するためにhasOwnPropertyメソッドを使用します。

for (var prop in p) {
    if (!p.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
        //The current property is not a direct property of p
        continue;
    }
    //Do your logic with the property here
}

オブジェクトをループする別の方法について言及しないと、質問は完了しません。

現在、多くのよく知られた JavaScript ライブラリは、コレクションを反復処理するための独自のメソッドを提供しています。以上 配列, オブジェクト, 、 そして 配列のようなオブジェクト. 。これらのメソッドは使いやすく、どのブラウザーとも完全に互換性があります。

  1. 一緒に仕事をするなら jQuery, を使用できます jQuery.each() 方法。これを使用すると、オブジェクトと配列の両方をシームレスに反復できます。

    $.each(obj, function(key, value) {
        console.log(key, value);
    });
    
  2. アンダースコア.js 方法を見つけることができます _.each(), 要素のリストを反復処理し、各要素を指定された関数に順番に渡します (引数の順序に注意してください) 反復する 関数!):

    _.each(obj, function(value, key) {
        console.log(key, value);
    });
    
  3. ローダッシュ オブジェクトのプロパティを反復処理するためのメソッドがいくつか用意されています。基本 _.forEach() (または別名です) _.each()) はオブジェクトと配列の両方をループするのに便利ですが、(!) オブジェクトは length プロパティは配列のように扱われるため、この動作を回避するには、次の使用をお勧めします。 _.forIn() そして _.forOwn() メソッド (これらにも value 引数が最初に来ます):

    _.forIn(obj, function(value, key) {
        console.log(key, value);
    });
    

    _.forIn() 繰り返します 自分のものと継承されたもの オブジェクトの数え切れないほどのプロパティ _.forOwn() 以上のみ反復します 自分の オブジェクトのプロパティ (基本的には hasOwnProperty 関数)。単純なオブジェクトとオブジェクト リテラルの場合、これらのメソッドはいずれも正常に機能します。

一般に、説明されているすべてのメソッドは、提供されたオブジェクトに対して同じ動作をします。ネイティブを使用する以外に for..in ループは通常次のようになります もっと早く いかなる抽象化よりも、 jQuery.each(), 、これらのメソッドは非常に使いやすく、必要なコーディングが少なく、より適切なエラー処理が可能です。

ECMAScript 5 では、リテラルの反復フィールドに新しいアプローチがあります。 Object.keys

さらに詳しい情報は、 MDN

現在のバージョンのブラウザ (Chrome30、IE10、FF25) でのより高速な解決策として、私の選択は以下です。

var keys = Object.keys(p),
    len = keys.length,
    i = 0,
    prop,
    value;
while (i < len) {
    prop = keys[i];
    value = p[prop];
    i += 1;
}

このアプローチのパフォーマンスをさまざまな実装と比較できます。 jsperf.com:

で確認できるブラウザのサポート Kangax の互換表

古いブラウザの場合 単純 そして 満杯 ポリフィル

更新:

この質問で最も一般的なすべてのケースのパフォーマンスの比較 perfjs.info:

オブジェクトリテラルの反復

あなただけのようにそれを反復処理することができます:

for (var key in p) {
  alert(p[key]);
}

keyは、プロパティの値を取らないこと、それだけでインデックス値です注意します。

Preface:

  • Object properties can be own (the property is on the object itself) or inherited (not on the object itself, on one of its prototypes).
  • Object properties can be enumerable or non-enumerable. Non-enumerable properties are left out of lots of property enumerations/arrays.
  • Property names can be strings or Symbols. Properties whose names are Symbols are left out of lots of property enumerations/arrays.

Here in 2018, your options for looping through an object's properties are (some examples follow the list):

  1. for-in [MDN, spec] — A loop structure that loops through the names of an object's enumerable properties, including inherited ones, whose names are strings
  2. Object.keys [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the names of an object's own, enumerable properties whose names are strings.
  3. Object.values [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the values of an object's own, enumerable properties.
  4. Object.entries [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the names and values of an object's own, enumerable properties (each entry in the array is a [name, value] array).
  5. Object.getOwnPropertyNames [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the names of an object's own properties (even non-enumerable ones) whose names are strings.
  6. Object.getOwnPropertySymbols [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the names of an object's own properties (even non-enumerable ones) whose names are Symbols.
  7. Reflect.ownKeys [MDN, spec] — A function providing an array of the names of an object's own properties (even non-enumerable ones), whether those names are strings or Symbols.
  8. If you want all of an object's properties, including non-enumerable inherited ones, you need to use a loop and Object.getPrototypeOf [MDN, spec] and use Object.getOwnPropertyNames, Object.getOwnPropertySymbols, or Reflect.ownKeys on each object in the prototype chain (example at the bottom of this answer).

With all of them except for-in, you'd use some kind of looping construct on the array (for, for-of, forEach, etc.).

Examples:

for-in:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const name in o) {
    const value = o[name];
    console.log(`${name} = ${value}`);
}

Object.keys (with a for-of loop, but you can use any looping construct):

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const name of Object.keys(o)) {
    const value = o[name];
    console.log(`${name} = ${value}`);
}

Object.values:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const value of Object.values(o)) {
    console.log(`${value}`);
}

Object.entries:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const [name, value] of Object.entries(o)) {
    console.log(`${name} = ${value}`);
}

Object.getOwnPropertyNames:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const name of Object.getOwnPropertyNames(o)) {
    const value = o[name];
    console.log(`${name} = ${value}`);
}

Object.getOwnPropertySymbols:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const name of Object.getOwnPropertySymbols(o)) {
    const value = o[name];
    console.log(`${String(name)} = ${value}`);
}

Reflect.ownKeys:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (const name of Reflect.ownKeys(o)) {
    const value = o[name];
    console.log(`${String(name)} = ${value}`);
}

All properties, including inherited non-enumerable ones:

// A prototype object to inherit from, with a string-named property
const p = {answer: 42};
// The object we'll look at, which inherits from `p`
const o = Object.create(p);
// A string-named property
o.question = "Life, the Universe, and Everything";
// A symbol-named property
o[Symbol("author")] = "Douglas Adams";
for (let depth = 0, current = o; current; ++depth, current = Object.getPrototypeOf(current)) {
    for (const name of Reflect.ownKeys(current)) {
        const value = o[name];
        console.log(`[${depth}] ${String(name)} = ${String(value)}`);
    }
}
.as-console-wrapper {
  max-height: 100% !important;
}

Since es2015 is getting more and more popular I am posting this answer which include usage of generator and iterator to smoothly iterate through [key, value] pairs. As it is possible in other languages for instance Ruby.

Ok here is a code:

const MyObject = {
  'a': 'Hello',
  'b': 'it\'s',
  'c': 'me',
  'd': 'you',
  'e': 'looking',
  'f': 'for',
  [Symbol.iterator]: function* () {
    for (const i of Object.keys(this)) {
      yield [i, this[i]];
    }
  }
};

for (const [k, v] of MyObject) {
  console.log(`Here is key ${k} and here is value ${v}`);
}

All information about how can you do an iterator and generator you can find at developer Mozilla page.

Hope It helped someone.

EDIT:

ES2017 will include Object.entries which will make iterating over [key, value] pairs in objects even more easier. It is now known that it will be a part of a standard according to the ts39 stage information.

I think it is time to update my answer to let it became even more fresher than it's now.

const MyObject = {
  'a': 'Hello',
  'b': 'it\'s',
  'c': 'me',
  'd': 'you',
  'e': 'looking',
  'f': 'for',
};

for (const [k, v] of Object.entries(MyObject)) {
  console.log(`Here is key ${k} and here is value ${v}`);
}

You can find more about usage on MDN page

for(key in p) {
  alert( p[key] );
}

Note: you can do this over arrays, but you'll iterate over the length and other properties, too.

After looking through all the answers in here, hasOwnProperty isn't required for my own usage because my json object is clean; there's really no sense in adding any additional javascript processing. This is all I'm using:

for (var key in p) {
    console.log(key + ' => ' + p[key]);
    // key is key
    // value is p[key]
}

via prototype with forEach() which should skip the prototype chain properties:

Object.prototype.each = function(f) {
    var obj = this
    Object.keys(obj).forEach( function(key) { 
        f( key , obj[key] ) 
    });
}


//print all keys and values
var obj = {a:1,b:2,c:3}
obj.each(function(key,value) { console.log(key + " " + value) });
// a 1
// b 2
// c 3

It's interesting people in these answers have touched on both Object.keys() and for...of but never combined them:

var map = {well:'hello', there:'!'};
for (let key of Object.keys(map))
    console.log(key + ':' + map[key]);

You can't just for...of an Object because it's not an iterator, and for...index or .forEach()ing the Object.keys() is ugly/inefficient.
I'm glad most people are refraining from for...in (with or without checking .hasOwnProperty()) as that's also a bit messy, so other than my answer above, I'm here to say...


You can make ordinary object associations iterate! Behaving just like Maps with direct use of the fancy for...of
DEMO working in Chrome and FF (I assume ES6 only)

var ordinaryObject = {well:'hello', there:'!'};
for (let pair of ordinaryObject)
    //key:value
    console.log(pair[0] + ':' + pair[1]);

//or
for (let [key, value] of ordinaryObject)
    console.log(key + ':' + value);

So long as you include my shim below:

//makes all objects iterable just like Maps!!! YAY
//iterates over Object.keys() (which already ignores prototype chain for us)
Object.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = function() {
    var keys = Object.keys(this)[Symbol.iterator]();
    var obj = this;
    var output;
    return {next:function() {
        if (!(output = keys.next()).done)
            output.value = [output.value, obj[output.value]];
        return output;
    }};
};

Without having to create a real Map object that doesn't have the nice syntactic sugar.

var trueMap = new Map([['well', 'hello'], ['there', '!']]);
for (let pair of trueMap)
    console.log(pair[0] + ':' + pair[1]);

In fact, with this shim, if you still wanted to take advantage of Map's other functionality (without shimming them all in) but still wanted to use the neat object notation, since objects are now iterable you can now just make a Map from it!

//shown in demo
var realMap = new Map({well:'hello', there:'!'});

For those who don't like to shim, or mess with prototype in general, feel free to make the function on window instead, calling it something like getObjIterator() then;

//no prototype manipulation
function getObjIterator(obj) {
    //create a dummy object instead of adding functionality to all objects
    var iterator = new Object();

    //give it what the shim does but as its own local property
    iterator[Symbol.iterator] = function() {
        var keys = Object.keys(obj)[Symbol.iterator]();
        var output;

        return {next:function() {
            if (!(output = keys.next()).done)
                output.value = [output.value, obj[output.value]];
            return output;
        }};
    };

    return iterator;
}

Now you can just call it as an ordinary function, nothing else is affected

var realMap = new Map(getObjIterator({well:'hello', there:'!'}))

or

for (let pair of getObjIterator(ordinaryObject))

There's no reason why that wouldn't work.

Welcome to the future.

Object.keys(obj) : Array

retrieves all string-valued keys of all enumerable own (non-inherited) properties.

So it gives the same list of keys as you intend by testing each object key with hasOwnProperty. You don't need that extra test operation than and Object.keys( obj ).forEach(function( key ){}) is supposed to be faster. Let's prove it:

var uniqid = function(){
			var text = "",
					i = 0,
					possible = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
			for( ; i < 32; i++ ) {
					text += possible.charAt( Math.floor( Math.random() * possible.length ) );
			}
			return text;
		}, 
		CYCLES = 100000,
		obj = {}, 
		p1,
		p2,
		p3,
		key;

// Populate object with random properties
Array.apply( null, Array( CYCLES ) ).forEach(function(){
	obj[ uniqid() ] = new Date()
});

// Approach #1
p1 = performance.now();
Object.keys( obj ).forEach(function( key ){
	var waste = obj[ key ];
});

p2 = performance.now();
console.log( "Object.keys approach took " + (p2 - p1) + " milliseconds.");

// Approach #2
for( key in obj ) {
	if ( obj.hasOwnProperty( key ) ) {
		var waste = obj[ key ];
	}
}

p3 = performance.now();
console.log( "for...in/hasOwnProperty approach took " + (p3 - p2) + " milliseconds.");

In my Firefox I have following results

  • Object.keys approach took 40.21101451665163 milliseconds.
  • for...in/hasOwnProperty approach took 98.26163508463651 milliseconds.

PS. on Chrome the difference even bigger http://codepen.io/dsheiko/pen/JdrqXa

PS2: In ES6 (EcmaScript 2015) you can iterate iterable object nicer:

let map = new Map().set('a', 1).set('b', 2);
for (let pair of map) {
    console.log(pair);
}

// OR 
let map = new Map([
    [false, 'no'],
    [true,  'yes'],
]);
map.forEach((value, key) => {
    console.log(key, value);
});

Here is another method to iterate through an object.

   var p = {
"p1": "value1",
"p2": "value2",
"p3": "value3"
};


Object.keys(p).forEach(key => { console.log(key, p[key]) })

var p = {
    "p1": "value1",
    "p2": "value2",
    "p3": "value3"
};

for (var key in p) {
    if (p.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
        console.log(key + " = " + p[key]);
    }
}
<p>
  Output:<br>
  p1 = values1<br>
  p2 = values2<br>
  p3 = values3
</p>

The Object.keys() method returns an array of a given object's own enumerable properties. Read more about it here

var p = {
    "p1": "value1",
    "p2": "value2",
    "p3": "value3"
};

Object.keys(p).map((key)=> console.log(key + "->" + p[key]))

You can add a simple forEach function to all objects, so you can automatically loop through any object:

Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, 'forEach', {
    value: function (func) {
        for (var key in this) {
            if (!this.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
                // skip loop if the property is from prototype
                continue;
            }
            var value = this[key];
            func(key, value);
        }
    },
    enumerable: false
});

For those people who don't like the "for ... in"-method:

Object.defineProperty(Object.prototype, 'forEach', {
    value: function (func) {
        var arr = Object.keys(this);
        for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
            var key = arr[i];
            func(key, this[key]);
        }
    },
    enumerable: false
});

Now, you can simple call:

p.forEach (function(key, value){
    console.log ("Key: " + key);
    console.log ("Value: " + value);
});

If you don't want to get conflicts with other forEach-Methods you can name it with your unique name.

Only JavaScript code without dependencies:

var p = {"p1": "value1", "p2": "value2", "p3": "value3"};
keys = Object.keys(p);   // ["p1", "p2", "p3"]

for(i = 0; i < keys.length; i++){
  console.log(keys[i] + "=" + p[keys[i]]);   // p1=value1, p2=value2, p3=value3
}

Loops can be pretty interesting when using pure JavaScript. It seems that only ECMA6 (New 2015 JavaScript specification) got the loops under control. Unfortunately as I'm writing this, both Browsers and popular Integrated development environment (IDE) are still struggling to support completely the new bells and whistles.

At a glance here is what a JavaScript object loop look like before ECMA6:

for (var key in object) {
  if (p.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
    var value = object[key];
    console.log(key); // This is the key;
    console.log(value); // This is the value;
  }
}

Also, I know this is out of scope with this question but in 2011, ECMAScript 5.1 added the forEach method for Arrays only which basically created a new improved way to loop through arrays while still leaving non iterable objects with the old verbose and confusing for loop. But the odd part is that this new forEach method does not support break which led to all sorts of other problems.

Basically in 2011, there is not a real solid way to loop in JavaScript other than what many popular libraries (jQuery, Underscore, etc.) decided to re-implement.

As of 2015, we now have a better out of the box way to loop (and break) any object type (including Arrays and Strings). Here is what a loop in JavaScript will eventually look like when the recommendation becomes mainstream:

for (let [key, value] of Object.entries(object)) {
    console.log(key); // This is the key;
    console.log(value); // This is the value;
}

Note that most browsers won't support the code above as of June 18th 2016. Even in Chrome you need to enable this special flag for it to work: chrome://flags/#enable-javascript-harmony

Until this becomes the new standard, the old method can still be used but there are also alternatives in popular libraries or even lightweight alternatives for those who aren't using any of these libraries.

    var p =[{"username":"ordermanageadmin","user_id":"2","resource_id":"Magento_Sales::actions"},
{"username":"ordermanageadmin_1","user_id":"3","resource_id":"Magento_Sales::actions"}]
for(var value in p) {
    for (var key in value) {
        if (p.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
            console.log(key + " -> " + p[key]);
        }
    }
}

If anybody needs to loop through arrayObjects with condition:

var arrayObjects = [{"building":"A", "status":"good"},{"building":"B","status":"horrible"}];

for (var i=0; i< arrayObjects.length; i++) {
  console.log(arrayObjects[i]);
  
  for(key in arrayObjects[i]) {      
    
      if (key == "status" && arrayObjects[i][key] == "good") {
        
          console.log(key + "->" + arrayObjects[i][key]);
      }else{
          console.log("nothing found");
      }
   }
}

Considering ES6 I'd like to add my own spoon of sugar and provide one more approach to iterate over object's properties.

Since plain JS object isn't iterable just out of box, we aren't able to use for..of loop for iterating over its content. But no one can stop us to make it iterable.

Let's we have book object.

let book = {
  title: "Amazing book",
  author: "Me",
  pages: 3
}

book[Symbol.iterator] = function(){

  let properties = Object.keys(this); // returns an array with property names
  let counter = 0;
  let isDone = false;

  let next = () => {
    if(counter >= properties.length){
      isDone = true;
    }
    return { done: isDone, value: this[properties[counter++]] }
  }

  return { next };
}

Since we've made it we can use it this way:

for(let pValue of book){
  console.log(pValue);
}
------------------------
Amazing book
Me
3

Or if you know the power of ES6 generators, so you certainly can make the code above much shorter.

book[Symbol.iterator] = function *(){

  let properties = Object.keys(this);
  for (let p of properties){
    yield this[p];
  }

}

Sure, you can apply such behavior for all objects with making Object iterable on prototype level.

Object.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = function() {...}

Also, objects that comply with the iterable protocol can be used with the new ES2015 feature spread operator thus we can read object property values as an array.

let pValues = [...book];
console.log(pValues);
-------------------------
["Amazing book", "Me", 3]

Or you can use destructuring assignment:

let [title, , pages] = book; // notice that we can just skip unnecessary values
console.log(title);
console.log(pages);
------------------
Amazing book
3

You can check out JSFiddle with all code I've provided above.

In ES6 we have well-known symbols to expose some previously internal methods, you can use it to define how iterators work for this object:

var p = {
    "p1": "value1",
    "p2": "value2",
    "p3": "value3",
    *[Symbol.iterator]() {
        yield *Object.keys(this);
    }
};

[...p] //["p1", "p2", "p3"]

this will give the same result as using for...in es6 loop.

for(var key in p) {
    console.log(key);
}

But its important to know the capabilities you now have using es6!

I would do this rather than checking obj.hasOwnerProperty within every for ... in loop.

var obj = {a : 1};
for(var key in obj){
    //obj.hasOwnProperty(key) is not needed.
    console.log(key);
}
//then check if anybody has messed the native object. Put this code at the end of the page.
for(var key in Object){
    throw new Error("Please don't extend the native object");
}

since ES06 you can get the values of an object as array with

let arrValues = Object.values( yourObject) ;

it return the an array of the object values and it not extract values from Prototype!!

MDN DOCS Object.values()

and for keys ( allready answerd before me here )

let arrKeys   = Object.keys(yourObject);

If you want to iterate over non-enumerable properties as well, you can use Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj) to return an array of all properties (enumerable or not) found directly upon a given object.

var obj = Object.create({}, {
  // non-enumerable property
  getFoo: {
    value: function() { return this.foo; },
    enumerable: false
  }
});

obj.foo = 1; // enumerable property

Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj).forEach(function (name) {
  document.write(name + ': ' + obj[name] + '<br/>');
});

In latest ES script, you can do something like this:

Object.entries(p);

Object.entries() function:

var p = {
	    "p1": "value1",
	    "p2": "value2",
	    "p3": "value3"
	};

for (var i in Object.entries(p)){
	var key = Object.entries(p)[i][0];
	var value = Object.entries(p)[i][1];
	console.log('key['+i+']='+key+' '+'value['+i+']='+value);
}

I had a similar problem when using Angular, here is the solution that I've found.

Step 1. Get all the object keys. using Object.keys. This method returns an array of a given object’s own enumerable properties.

Step 2. Create an empty array. This is an where all the properties are going to live, since your new ngFor loop is going to point to this array, we gotta catch them all. Step 3. Iterate throw all keys, and push each one into the array you created. Here’s how that looks like in code.

    // Evil response in a variable. Here are all my vehicles.
let evilResponse = { 
  "car" : 
    { 
       "color" : "red",
       "model" : "2013"
    },
   "motorcycle": 
    { 
       "color" : "red",
       "model" : "2016"
    },
   "bicycle": 
    { 
       "color" : "red",
       "model" : "2011"
    }
}
// Step 1. Get all the object keys.
let evilResponseProps = Object.keys(evilResponse);
// Step 2. Create an empty array.
let goodResponse = [];
// Step 3. Iterate throw all keys.
for (prop of evilResponseProps) { 
    goodResponse.push(evilResponseProps[prop]);
}

Here is a link to the original post. https://medium.com/@papaponmx/looping-over-object-properties-with-ngfor-in-angular-869cd7b2ddcc

An object becomes an iterator when it implements the .next() method

const james = {
name: 'James',
height: `5'10"`,
weight: 185,

[Symbol.iterator]() {
let properties = []
for (let key of Object.keys(james)){
     properties.push(key);
 }

index = 0;
return {
        next: () => {
            let key = properties[index];
            let value = this[key];
            let done = index >= properties.length - 1 ;
            index++;
            return { key, value, done };
        }
    };
  }

};


const iterator = james[Symbol.iterator]();

console.log(iterator.next().value); // 'James'
console.log(iterator.next().value); // `5'10`
console.log(iterator.next().value); // 185
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