// object literals const blogs = [ { title: "Front end and back end programming", likes: 30 }, { title: "How to do with react.js", likes: 13 } ]; // console.log(blogs) let user = { name: "David", age: 36, email: "davidaster007@gmail.com", location: "Wien", blogs: [ { title: "Front end and back end programming", likes: 30 }, { title: "How to do with react.js", likes: 13 } ], login() { console.log(`${this.name} is logged in!`) }, logout() { console.log(`${this.name} is logged out!`) }, logBlog() { // for (let i = 0; i { console.log(blog.title, blog.likes) }); // } // console.log(this) } // login: function () { // console.log(`${this.name} is logged in!`) // }, // logout: function () { // console.log(`${this.name} is logged out!`) // }, // logBlog:function() { // // for (let i = 0; i { // console.log(`${blog}`) // }); // // } // console.log(this) // } }; // console.log(user) // console.log(user.name) // user.age = 40; // console.log(user) // console.log(user["email"]) // const key = "location"; // user[key] = "New York" // user[location] = "New York" // console.log(user) // console.log(typeof user) // user.login() // user.logout() // const name = "Jozica" user.logBlog() // console.log(this)