Yes, you can use Object.fromEntries() along with substr(). Under substr(), mention the index from where to begin the substring and the length.
Example
const originalString = { "John 21 2010" :1010, "John 24 2012" :1011, "John 22 2014" :1012, "John 22 2016" :1013, } const result = Object.fromEntries(Object.entries(originalString). map(([k, objectValue])=> [k.substr(0, k.length-5), objectValue])); console.log(result)
To run the above program, you need to use the following command −
node fileName.js.
Here, my file name is demo41.js.
Output
This will produce the following output −
PS C:\Users\Amit\JavaScript-code> node demo41.js { 'John 21': 1010, 'John 24': 1011, 'John 22': 1013 }