# Destructure With Access To Nested Value And Parent Value A destructuring pattern that I often see (especially in React code) is to peel off a nested value in the argument declaration of a function. ```javascript const Component = ({ data: { name: displayName }}) => { return (

{displayName}

); }; ``` On its own this works quite well, but what happens when you need access to the full set of `data` as well as the nested `name` value? I often see this. ```javascript const Component = ({ data }) => { const { name: displayName } = data; return (

{displayName}

); }; ``` ES6 destructuring is flexible. You can skip the `const` line and keep everything in the argument declaration. ```javascript const Component = ({ data: { name: displayName }, data }) => { return (

{displayName}

); }; ``` You can re-reference the `data` value after the nested destructuring.