Array
In JavaScript, the Array property of the global object is a constructor for
array instances.
An array is a JavaScript object. Note that you shouldn't use it as an associative array, use Object instead.
Creating an Array
The following example creates an array, msgArray, with a length of 0, then assigns values to msgArray[0] and msgArray[99], changing the length of the array to 100.
var msgArray = new Array();
msgArray[0] = "Hello";
msgArray[99] = "world";
if (msgArray.length == 100)
print("The length is 100.");
Creating a Two-dimensional Array
The following creates chess board as a two dimensional array of strings. The first move is made by copying the 'P' in 6,4 to 4,4. The position 4,4 is left blank.
var board =
[ ['R','N','B','Q','K','B','N','R'],
['P','P','P','P','P','P','P','P'],
[' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' '],
[' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' '],
[' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' '],
[' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' ',' '],
['p','p','p','p','p','p','p','p'],
['r','n','b','q','k','b','n','r']];
print(board.join('\n') + '\n\n');
// Move King's Pawn forward 2
board[4][4] = board[6][4];
board[6][4] = ' ';
print(board.join('\n'));
Here is the output:
R,N,B,Q,K,B,N,R
P,P,P,P,P,P,P,P
 , , , , , , ,
 , , , , , , ,
 , , , , , , ,
 , , , , , , ,
p,p,p,p,p,p,p,p
r,n,b,q,k,b,n,r
R,N,B,Q,K,B,N,R
P,P,P,P,P,P,P,P
 , , , , , , ,
 , , , , , , ,
 , , , ,p, , ,
 , , , , , , ,
p,p,p,p, ,p,p,p
r,n,b,q,k,b,n,r
Accessing array elements
Array elements are nothing less than object properties, so they are accessed as such.
var myArray = new Array("Wind", "Rain", "Fire");
myArray[0]; // "Wind"
myArray[1]; // "Rain"
// etc.
myArray.length; // 3
// Even if indices are properties, the following notation throws a syntax error
myArray.2;
// It should be noted that in JavaScript, object property names are strings. Consequently,
myArray[0] === myArray["0"];
myArray[1] === myArray["1"];
// etc.
// However, this should be considered carefully
myArray[02]; // "Fire". The number 02 is converted as the "2" string
myArray["02"]; // undefined. There is no property named "02"
Relationship between length and numerical properties
An array's length property and numerical properties are connected. Here is some code explaining how this relationship works.
var a = [];
a[0] = 'a';
console.log(a[0]); // 'a'
console.log(a.length); // 1
a[1] = 32;
console.log(a[1]); // 32
console.log(a.length); // 2
a[13] = 12345;
console.log(a[13]); // 12345
console.log(a.length); // 14
a.length = 10;
console.log(a[13]); // undefined, when reducing the length elements after length+1 are removed
console.log(a.length); // 10
Creating an array using the result of a match
The result of a match between a regular expression and a string can create an array. This array has properties and elements that provide information about the match. An array is the return value of RegExp.exec, String.match, and String.replace. To help explain these properties and elements, look at the following example and then refer to the table below:
// Match one d followed by one or more b's followed by one d
// Remember matched b's and the following d
// Ignore case
var myRe = /d(b+)(d)/i;
var myArray = myRe.exec("cdbBdbsbz");
The properties and elements returned from this match are as follows:
| Property/Element | Description | Example | 
|---|---|---|
| input | A read-only property that reflects the original string against which the | cdbBdbsbz | 
| regular expression was matched. | ||
| index | A read-only property that is the zero-based index of the match in the string. | 1 | 
| [0] | A read-only element that specifies the last matched characters. | dbBd | 
| [1], ...[n] | Read-only elements that specify the parenthesized substring matches, if included in | [1]: bB [2]: d | 
| the regular expression. The number of possible parenthesized substrings is unlimited. | 
Properties
Reflects the number of elements in an array.
The value of the length property is an integer with a positive sign and a value less than 2 to the 32
power (232).
You can set the length property to truncate an array at any time. When you extend an array by changing
its length property, the number of actual elements does not increase; for example, if you set length
to 3 when it is currently 2, the array still contains only 2 elements.
In the following example the array numbers is iterated through by looking at the length property to see
how many elements it has. Each value is then doubled.
var numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
for (var i = 0; i < numbers.length; i++) {
    numbers[i] *= 2;
}
// numbers is now [2,4,6,8,10];
The following example shortens the array statesUS to a length of 50 if the current length is greater
than 50.
if (statesUS.length > 50) {
    statesUS.length=50
}
Methods
Instance methods Returns a new array comprised of this array joined with other array(s) and/or value(s). ...Returns a new array comprised of this array joined with other array(s) and/or value(s).
concat creates a new array consisting of the elements in the this object on which it is called,
followed in order by, for each argument, the elements of that argument (if the argument is an
array) or the argument itself (if the argument is not an array).
concat does not alter this or any of the arrays provided as arguments but instead returns a
"one level deep" copy that contains copies of the same elements combined from the original arrays.
Elements of the original arrays are copied into the new array as follows:
Object references (and not the actual object): concat copies object references into the new
array. Both the original and new array refer to the same object. That is, if a referenced object is
modified, the changes are visible to both the new and original arrays.
Strings and numbers (not String and Number objects): concat copies the values of
strings and numbers into the new array.
Any operation on the new array will have no effect on the original arrays, and vice versa.
Concatenating two arrays
The following code concatenates two arrays:
var alpha = ["a", "b", "c"];
var numeric = [1, 2, 3];
// creates array ["a", "b", "c", 1, 2, 3]; alpha and numeric are unchanged
var alphaNumeric = alpha.concat(numeric);
Concatenating three arrays
The following code concatenates three arrays:
var num1 = [1, 2, 3];
var num2 = [4, 5, 6];
var num3 = [7, 8, 9];
// creates array [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]; num1, num2, num3 are unchanged
var nums = num1.concat(num2, num3);
Concatenating values to an array
The following code concatenates three values to an array:
var alpha = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
// creates array ["a", "b", "c", 1, 2, 3], leaving alpha unchanged
var alphaNumeric = alpha.concat(1, [2, 3]);
Parameters
- values : Object...Arrays and/or values to concatenate to the resulting array. 
Returns
- ArrayNew array. 
Tests whether all elements in the array pass the test implemented
by the provided function. ...Tests whether all elements in the array pass the test implemented
by the provided function.
every executes the provided callback function once for each element
present in the array until it finds one where callback returns a
false value. If such an element is found, the every method
immediately returns false. Otherwise, if callback returned a true
value for all elements, every will return true. callback is invoked
only for indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not
invoked for indexes which have been deleted or which have never
been assigned values.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to every, it will be used as
the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
every does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by every is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to every begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, their value as passed
to callback will be the value at the time every visits them;
elements that are deleted are not visited.
every acts like the "for all" quantifier in mathematics. In
particular, for an empty array, it returns true. (It is vacuously
true that all elements of the empty set satisfy any given
condition.)
The following example tests whether all elements in the array are
bigger than 10.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var passed = [12, 5, 8, 130, 44].every(isBigEnough);
// passed is false
passed = [12, 54, 18, 130, 44].every(isBigEnough);
// passed is true
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- BooleanTrue when all elements pass the test. 
Creates a new array with all elements that pass the test
implemented by the provided function. ...Creates a new array with all elements that pass the test
implemented by the provided function.
filter calls a provided callback function once for each element in
an array, and constructs a new array of all the values for which
callback returns a true value. callback is invoked only for indexes
of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked for
indexes which have been deleted or which have never been assigned
values. Array elements which do not pass the callback test are
simply skipped, and are not included in the new array.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to filter, it will be
used as the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
filter does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by filter is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to filter begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value
as passed to callback will be the value at the time filter visits
them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following example uses filter to create a filtered array that
has all elements with values less than 10 removed.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var filtered = [12, 5, 8, 130, 44].filter(isBigEnough);
// filtered is [12, 130, 44]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- ArrayArray of elements that passed the test. 
forEach( callback, [thisArg] )Executes a provided function once per array element. ...Executes a provided function once per array element.
forEach executes the provided function (callback) once for each element present in the array. callback
is invoked only for indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked for indexes which
have been deleted or which have never been assigned values.
If a thisArg parameter is provided to forEach, it will be used as the this value for each callback
invocation as if callback.call(thisArg, element, index, array) was called. If thisArg is undefined or
null, the this value within the function depends on whether the function is in strict mode or not
(passed value if in strict mode, global object if in non-strict mode).
The range of elements processed by forEach is set before the first invocation of callback. Elements
which are appended to the array after the call to forEach begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value as passed to callback will be the
value at the time forEach visits them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following code logs a line for each element in an array:
function logArrayElements(element, index, array) {
    console.log("a[" + index + "] = " + element);
}
[2, 5, 9].forEach(logArrayElements);
// logs:
// a[0] = 2
// a[1] = 5
// a[2] = 9
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
 Returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present. ...Returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
indexOf compares searchElement to elements of the Array using strict equality (the same method used
by the ===, or triple-equals, operator).
var array = [2, 5, 9];
var index = array.indexOf(2);
// index is 0
index = array.indexOf(7);
// index is -1
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- searchElement : MixedElement to locate in the array. 
- fromIndex : Number (optional)The index at which to begin the search. Defaults to 0, i.e. the whole array
will be searched. If the index is greater than or equal to the length of the array, -1 is returned, i.e.
the array will not be searched. If negative, it is taken as the offset from the end of the array. Note
that even when the index is negative, the array is still searched from front to back. If the calculated
index is less than 0, the whole array will be searched. 
Returns
- NumberThe index of element found or -1. 
Joins all elements of an array into a string. ...Joins all elements of an array into a string.
The string conversions of all array elements are joined into one string.
The following example creates an array, a, with three elements, then joins the array three times:
using the default separator, then a comma and a space, and then a plus.
var a = new Array("Wind","Rain","Fire");
var myVar1 = a.join();      // assigns "Wind,Rain,Fire" to myVar1
var myVar2 = a.join(", ");  // assigns "Wind, Rain, Fire" to myVar2
var myVar3 = a.join(" + "); // assigns "Wind + Rain + Fire" to myVar3
Parameters
- separator : StringSpecifies a string to separate each element of the array. The separator
is converted to a string if necessary. If omitted, the array elements are separated with a comma. 
Returns
- StringA string of the array elements. 
Returns the last index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present. ...Returns the last index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
The array is searched backwards, starting at fromIndex.
lastIndexOf compares searchElement to elements of the Array using strict equality (the same method
used by the ===, or triple-equals, operator).
var array = [2, 5, 9, 2];
var index = array.lastIndexOf(2);
// index is 3
index = array.lastIndexOf(7);
// index is -1
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, 3);
// index is 3
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, 2);
// index is 0
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, -2);
// index is 0
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, -1);
// index is 3
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- searchElement : MixedElement to locate in the array. 
- fromIndex : Number (optional)The index at which to start searching backwards. Defaults to the array's
length, i.e. the whole array will be searched. If the index is greater than or equal to the length of
the array, the whole array will be searched. If negative, it is taken as the offset from the end of the
array. Note that even when the index is negative, the array is still searched from back to front. If
the calculated index is less than 0, -1 is returned, i.e. the array will not be searched. 
Returns
- NumberThe index of element found or -1. 
Creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function
on every element in this array. ...Creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function
on every element in this array.
map calls a provided callback function once for each element in
an array, in order, and constructs a new array from the
results. callback is invoked only for indexes of the array which
have assigned values; it is not invoked for indexes which have been
deleted or which have never been assigned values.
If a thisArg parameter is provided to map, it will be used as the
this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not provided, or
is null, the global object associated with callback is used
instead.
map does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by map is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to map begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value
as passed to callback will be the value at the time map visits
them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following code creates an array of "plural" forms of nouns from
an array of their singular forms.
function fuzzyPlural(single) {
  var result = single.replace(/o/g, 'e');
  if( single === 'kangaroo'){
    result += 'se';
  }
  return result;
}
var words = ["foot", "goose", "moose", "kangaroo"];
console.log(words.map(fuzzyPlural));
// ["feet", "geese", "meese", "kangareese"]
The following code takes an array of numbers and creates a new
array containing the square roots of the numbers in the first
array.
var numbers = [1, 4, 9];
var roots = numbers.map(Math.sqrt);
// roots is now [1, 2, 3], numbers is still [1, 4, 9]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- ArrayArray of the return values of callbackfunction.
 
The pop method removes the last element from an array and returns that value to the caller. ...The pop method removes the last element from an array and returns that value to the caller.
pop is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
var popped = myFish.pop();
alert(popped); // Alerts 'surgeon'
Returns
- ObjectThe last element in the array 
Adds one or more elements to the end of an array and returns the new length of the array. ...Adds one or more elements to the end of an array and returns the new length of the array.
push is intentionally generic. This method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. The push method relies on a length property to determine where to start inserting
the given values. If the length property cannot be converted into a number, the index used
is 0. This includes the possibility of length being nonexistent, in which case length will
also be created.
The only native, array-like objects are strings, although they are not suitable in
applications of this method, as strings are immutable.
Adding elements to an array
The following code creates the sports array containing two elements, then appends two elements
to it. After the code executes, sports contains 4 elements: "soccer", "baseball", "football"
and "swimming".
var sports = ["soccer", "baseball"];
sports.push("football", "swimming");
Parameters
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the end of the array. 
Returns
- NumberThe new length property of the object upon which the method was called. 
reduce( callback, [initialValue] ) : MixedApplies a function against an accumulator and each value of the
array (from left-to-right) as to reduce it to a singl...Applies a function against an accumulator and each value of the
array (from left-to-right) as to reduce it to a single value.
reduce executes the callback function once for each element
present in the array, excluding holes in the array.
The first time the callback is called, previousValue and
currentValue can be one of two values. If initialValue is
provided in the call to reduce, then previousValue will be equal to
initialValue and currentValue will be equal to the first value in
the array. If no initialValue was provided, then previousValue will
be equal to the first value in the array and currentValue will be
equal to the second.
Suppose the following use of reduce occurred:
[0,1,2,3,4].reduce(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array){
  return previousValue + currentValue;
}
The callback would be invoked four times, with the arguments and
return values in each call being as follows:
              
 previousValue  
 currentValue  
 index  
 array        
 return value 
 
 first call   
 0              
 1             
 1      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 1 
 
 second call  
 1              
 2             
 2      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 3 
 
 third call   
 3              
 3             
 3      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 6 
 
 fourth call  
 6              
 4             
 4      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 10 
 
The value returned by reduce would be that of the last callback
invocation (10).
If you were to provide an initial value as the second argument to
reduce, the result would look like this:
[0,1,2,3,4].reduce(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array){
  return previousValue + currentValue;
}, 10);
              
 previousValue  
 currentValue  
 index  
 array        
 return value 
 
 first call   
 10             
 0             
 0      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 10 
 
 second call  
 10             
 1             
 1      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 11 
 
 third call   
 11             
 2             
 2      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 13 
 
 fourth call  
 13             
 3             
 3      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 16 
 
 fifth call   
 16             
 4             
 4      
 [0,1,2,3,4]  
 20 
 
The value returned by reduce this time would be, of course, 20.
Example: Sum up all values within an array:
var total = [0, 1, 2, 3].reduce(function(a, b) {
    return a + b;
}
// total == 6
Example: Flatten an array of arrays:
var flattened = [[0, 1], [2, 3], [4, 5]].reduce(function(a, b) {
    return a.concat(b);
}
// flattened is [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- callback : FunctionFunction to execute on each value in the array. Parameters- previousValue : MixedThe value previously returned in the last
invocation of the callback, orinitialValue, if supplied.
 
- currentValue : MixedThe current element being processed in the array. 
- index : NumberThe index of the current element being processed in the array. 
- array : ArrayThe array reducewas called upon.
 
 
- initialValue : Mixed (optional)Object to use as the first argument to the first call
of the callback.
 
Returns
- MixedThe value returned by final invocation of the callback.
 
reduceRight( callback, [initialValue] ) : MixedApplies a function simultaneously against two values of the array
(from right-to-left) as to reduce it to a single va...Applies a function simultaneously against two values of the array
(from right-to-left) as to reduce it to a single value.
reduceRight executes the callback function once for each
element present in the array, excluding holes in the array.
The first time the callback is called, previousValue and
currentValue can be one of two values. If initialValue is
provided in the call to reduceRight, then previousValue will be equal to
initialValue and currentValue will be equal to the last value in
the array. If no initialValue was provided, then previousValue will
be equal to the last value in the array and currentValue will be
equal to the second-to-last value.
Some example run-throughs of the function would look like this:
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4].reduceRight(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array) {
    return previousValue + currentValue;
}
// First call
previousValue = 4, currentValue = 3, index = 3
// Second call
previousValue = 7, currentValue = 2, index = 2
// Third call
previousValue = 9, currentValue = 1, index = 1
// Fourth call
previousValue = 10, currentValue = 0, index = 0
// array is always the object [0,1,2,3,4] upon which reduceRight was called
// Return Value: 10
And if you were to provide an initialValue, the result would look like this:
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4].reduceRight(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array) {
    return previousValue + currentValue;
}, 10);
// First call
previousValue = 10, currentValue = 4, index = 4
// Second call
previousValue = 14, currentValue = 3, index = 3
// Third call
previousValue = 17, currentValue = 2, index = 2
// Fourth call
previousValue = 19, currentValue = 1, index = 1
// Fifth call
previousValue = 20, currentValue = 0, index = 0
// array is always the object [0,1,2,3,4] upon which reduceRight was called
// Return Value: 20
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- callback : FunctionFunction to execute on each value in the array. Parameters- previousValue : MixedThe value previously returned in the last
invocation of the callback, orinitialValue, if supplied.
 
- currentValue : MixedThe current element being processed in the array. 
- index : NumberThe index of the current element being processed in the array. 
- array : ArrayThe array reduceRightwas called upon.
 
 
- initialValue : Mixed (optional)Object to use as the first argument to the first call
of the callback.
 
Returns
- MixedThe value returned by final invocation of the callback.
 
Reverses the order of the elements of an array -- the first becomes the last, and the
last becomes the first. ...Reverses the order of the elements of an array -- the first becomes the last, and the
last becomes the first.
The reverse method transposes the elements of the calling array object in place, mutating the
array, and returning a reference to the array.
The following example creates an array myArray, containing three elements, then reverses the array.
var myArray = ["one", "two", "three"];
myArray.reverse();
This code changes myArray so that:
- myArray[0] is "three"
- myArray[1] is "two"
- myArray[2] is "one"
Returns
- ArrayA reference to the array 
Removes the first element from an array and returns that element. ...Removes the first element from an array and returns that element.
The shift method removes the element at the zeroeth index and shifts the values at consecutive
indexes down, then returns the removed value.
shift is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
The following code displays the myFish array before and after removing its first element. It also
displays the removed element:
// assumes a println function is defined
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
println("myFish before: " + myFish);
var shifted = myFish.shift();
println("myFish after: " + myFish);
println("Removed this element: " + shifted);
This example displays the following:
myFish before: angel,clown,mandarin,surgeon
myFish after: clown,mandarin,surgeon
Removed this element: angel
Returns
- ObjectThe first element of the array prior to shifting. 
Extracts a section of an array and returns a new array. ...Extracts a section of an array and returns a new array.
slice does not alter the original array, but returns a new "one level deep" copy that contains
copies of the elements sliced from the original array. Elements of the original array are copied
into the new array as follows:
*   For object references (and not the actual object), slice copies object references into the
new array. Both the original and new array refer to the same object. If a referenced object
changes, the changes are visible to both the new and original arrays.
*   For strings and numbers (not String and Number objects), slice copies strings
and numbers into the new array. Changes to the string or number in one array does not affect the
other array.
If a new element is added to either array, the other array is not affected.
Using slice
In the following example, slice creates a new array, newCar, from myCar. Both include a
reference to the object myHonda. When the color of myHonda is changed to purple, both arrays
reflect the change.
// Using slice, create newCar from myCar.
var myHonda = { color: "red", wheels: 4, engine: { cylinders: 4, size: 2.2 } };
var myCar = [myHonda, 2, "cherry condition", "purchased 1997"];
var newCar = myCar.slice(0, 2);
// Print the values of myCar, newCar, and the color of myHonda
//  referenced from both arrays.
print("myCar = " + myCar.toSource());
print("newCar = " + newCar.toSource());
print("myCar[0].color = " + myCar[0].color);
print("newCar[0].color = " + newCar[0].color);
// Change the color of myHonda.
myHonda.color = "purple";
print("The new color of my Honda is " + myHonda.color);
// Print the color of myHonda referenced from both arrays.
print("myCar[0].color = " + myCar[0].color);
print("newCar[0].color = " + newCar[0].color);
This script writes:
myCar = [{color:"red", wheels:4, engine:{cylinders:4, size:2.2}}, 2, "cherry condition",
"purchased 1997"]
newCar = [{color:"red", wheels:4, engine:{cylinders:4, size:2.2}}, 2]
myCar[0].color = red
newCar[0].color = red
The new color of my Honda is purple
myCar[0].color = purple
newCar[0].color = purple
Parameters
- begin : NumberZero-based index at which to begin extraction.
As a negative index, startindicates an offset from the end of the sequence.slice(-2)extracts
the second-to-last element and the last element in the sequence
 
- end : NumberZero-based index at which to end extraction. sliceextracts up to but not
includingend.slice(1,4)extracts the second element through the fourth element (elements indexed 1, 2, and 3).
As a negative index, end indicates an offset from the end of the sequence.slice(2,-1)extracts
the third element through the second-to-last element in the sequence.
Ifendis omitted,sliceextracts to the end of the sequence.
 
Returns
- ArrayArray from the new start position up to (but not including) the specified end position. 
Tests whether some element in the array passes the test implemented
by the provided function. ...Tests whether some element in the array passes the test implemented
by the provided function.
some executes the callback function once for each element
present in the array until it finds one where callback returns a
true value. If such an element is found, some immediately returns
true. Otherwise, some returns false. callback is invoked only for
indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked
for indexes which have been deleted or which have never been
assigned values.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to some, it will be used as
the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
some does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by some is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements that are appended to the array
after the call to some begins will not be visited by callback. If
an existing, unvisited element of the array is changed by callback,
its value passed to the visiting callback will be the value at the
time that some visits that element's index; elements that are
deleted are not visited.
The following example tests whether some element in the array is
bigger than 10.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var passed = [2, 5, 8, 1, 4].some(isBigEnough);
// passed is false
passed = [12, 5, 8, 1, 4].some(isBigEnough);
// passed is true
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- BooleanTrue when at least one element passes the test. 
Sorts the elements of an array. ...Sorts the elements of an array.
If compareFunction is not supplied, elements are sorted by converting them to strings and
comparing strings in lexicographic ("dictionary" or "telephone book," not numerical) order. For
example, "80" comes before "9" in lexicographic order, but in a numeric sort 9 comes before 80.
If compareFunction is supplied, the array elements are sorted according to the return value of
the compare function. If a and b are two elements being compared, then:
If compareFunction(a, b) is less than 0, sort a to a lower index than b.
If compareFunction(a, b) returns 0, leave a and b unchanged with respect to each other, but
sorted with respect to all different elements. Note: the ECMAscript standard does not guarantee
this behaviour, and thus not all browsers respect this.
If compareFunction(a, b) is greater than 0, sort b to a lower index than a.
compareFunction(a, b) must always returns the same value when given a specific pair of elements a
and b as its two arguments. If inconsistent results are returned then the sort order is undefined
So, the compare function has the following form:
function compare(a, b)
{
    if (a is less than b by some ordering criterion)
        return -1;
    if (a is greater than b by the ordering criterion)
       return 1;
    // a must be equal to b
    return 0;
}
To compare numbers instead of strings, the compare function can simply subtract b from a:
function compareNumbers(a, b)
{
return a - b;
}
The sort() method can be conveniently used with closures:
var numbers = [4, 2, 5, 1, 3];
numbers.sort(function(a, b) {
    return a - b;
}
print(numbers);
Parameters
- compareFunction : FunctionSpecifies a function that defines the sort order. If omitted, the
array is sorted lexicographically (in dictionary order) according to the string conversion of each
element. 
Returns
- ArrayA reference to the array 
Adds and/or removes elements from an array. ...Adds and/or removes elements from an array.
If you specify a different number of elements to insert than the number you're removing, the array
will have a different length at the end of the call.
// assumes a print function is defined
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
print("myFish: " + myFish);
var removed = myFish.splice(2, 0, "drum");
print("After adding 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(3, 1);
print("After removing 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(2, 1, "trumpet");
print("After replacing 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(0, 2, "parrot", "anemone", "blue");
print("After replacing 2: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
This script displays:
myFish: angel,clown,mandarin,surgeon
After adding 1: angel,clown,drum,mandarin,surgeon
removed is:
After removing 1: angel,clown,drum,surgeon
removed is: mandarin
After replacing 1: angel,clown,trumpet,surgeon
removed is: drum
After replacing 2: parrot,anemone,blue,trumpet,surgeon
removed is: angel,clown
Parameters
- index : NumberIndex at which to start changing the array. If negative, will begin that
many elements from the end. 
- howMany : NumberAn integer indicating the number of old array elements to remove. If
howManyis 0, no elements are removed. In this case, you should specify at least one new element.
If nohowManyparameter is specified all elements after index are removed.
 
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the array. If you don't specify any
elements, splicesimply removes elements from the array.
 
Returns
- ArrayAn array containing the removed elements. If only one element is removed, an array
of one element is returned.. 
Returns a string representing the array and its elements. ...Returns a string representing the array and its elements. Overrides the Object.prototype.toString
method.
The Array object overrides the toString method of Object. For Array objects, the
toString method joins the array and returns one string containing each array element separated by
commas. For example, the following code creates an array and uses toString to convert the array
to a string.
var monthNames = new Array("Jan","Feb","Mar","Apr");
myVar = monthNames.toString(); // assigns "Jan,Feb,Mar,Apr" to myVar
JavaScript calls the toString method automatically when an array is to be represented as a text
value or when an array is referred to in a string concatenation.
Returns
- StringThe array as a string. 
Adds one or more elements to the front of an array and returns the new length of the array. ...Adds one or more elements to the front of an array and returns the new length of the array.
The unshift method inserts the given values to the beginning of an array-like object.
unshift is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
The following code displays the myFish array before and after adding elements to it.
// assumes a println function exists
myFish = ["angel", "clown"];
println("myFish before: " + myFish);
unshifted = myFish.unshift("drum", "lion");
println("myFish after: " + myFish);
println("New length: " + unshifted);
This example displays the following:
myFish before: ["angel", "clown"]
myFish after: ["drum", "lion", "angel", "clown"]
New length: 4
Parameters
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the front of the array. 
Returns
- NumberThe array's new length. 
Returns a new array comprised of this array joined with other array(s) and/or value(s).
concat creates a new array consisting of the elements in the this object on which it is called,
followed in order by, for each argument, the elements of that argument (if the argument is an
array) or the argument itself (if the argument is not an array).
concat does not alter this or any of the arrays provided as arguments but instead returns a
"one level deep" copy that contains copies of the same elements combined from the original arrays.
Elements of the original arrays are copied into the new array as follows:
Object references (and not the actual object): concat copies object references into the new
array. Both the original and new array refer to the same object. That is, if a referenced object is
modified, the changes are visible to both the new and original arrays.
Strings and numbers (not String and Number objects): concat copies the values of
strings and numbers into the new array.
Any operation on the new array will have no effect on the original arrays, and vice versa.
Concatenating two arrays
The following code concatenates two arrays:
var alpha = ["a", "b", "c"];
var numeric = [1, 2, 3];
// creates array ["a", "b", "c", 1, 2, 3]; alpha and numeric are unchanged
var alphaNumeric = alpha.concat(numeric);
Concatenating three arrays
The following code concatenates three arrays:
var num1 = [1, 2, 3];
var num2 = [4, 5, 6];
var num3 = [7, 8, 9];
// creates array [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]; num1, num2, num3 are unchanged
var nums = num1.concat(num2, num3);
Concatenating values to an array
The following code concatenates three values to an array:
var alpha = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
// creates array ["a", "b", "c", 1, 2, 3], leaving alpha unchanged
var alphaNumeric = alpha.concat(1, [2, 3]);
Parameters
- values : Object...Arrays and/or values to concatenate to the resulting array. 
Returns
- ArrayNew array. 
Tests whether all elements in the array pass the test implemented by the provided function.
every executes the provided callback function once for each element
present in the array until it finds one where callback returns a
false value. If such an element is found, the every method
immediately returns false. Otherwise, if callback returned a true
value for all elements, every will return true. callback is invoked
only for indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not
invoked for indexes which have been deleted or which have never
been assigned values.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to every, it will be used as
the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
every does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by every is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to every begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, their value as passed
to callback will be the value at the time every visits them;
elements that are deleted are not visited.
every acts like the "for all" quantifier in mathematics. In
particular, for an empty array, it returns true. (It is vacuously
true that all elements of the empty set satisfy any given
condition.)
The following example tests whether all elements in the array are bigger than 10.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var passed = [12, 5, 8, 130, 44].every(isBigEnough);
// passed is false
passed = [12, 54, 18, 130, 44].every(isBigEnough);
// passed is true
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- BooleanTrue when all elements pass the test. 
Creates a new array with all elements that pass the test implemented by the provided function.
filter calls a provided callback function once for each element in
an array, and constructs a new array of all the values for which
callback returns a true value. callback is invoked only for indexes
of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked for
indexes which have been deleted or which have never been assigned
values. Array elements which do not pass the callback test are
simply skipped, and are not included in the new array.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to filter, it will be
used as the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
filter does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by filter is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to filter begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value
as passed to callback will be the value at the time filter visits
them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following example uses filter to create a filtered array that has all elements with values less than 10 removed.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var filtered = [12, 5, 8, 130, 44].filter(isBigEnough);
// filtered is [12, 130, 44]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- ArrayArray of elements that passed the test. 
Executes a provided function once per array element.
forEach executes the provided function (callback) once for each element present in the array. callback
is invoked only for indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked for indexes which
have been deleted or which have never been assigned values.
If a thisArg parameter is provided to forEach, it will be used as the this value for each callback
invocation as if callback.call(thisArg, element, index, array) was called. If thisArg is undefined or
null, the this value within the function depends on whether the function is in strict mode or not
(passed value if in strict mode, global object if in non-strict mode).
The range of elements processed by forEach is set before the first invocation of callback. Elements
which are appended to the array after the call to forEach begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value as passed to callback will be the
value at the time forEach visits them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following code logs a line for each element in an array:
function logArrayElements(element, index, array) {
    console.log("a[" + index + "] = " + element);
}
[2, 5, 9].forEach(logArrayElements);
// logs:
// a[0] = 2
// a[1] = 5
// a[2] = 9
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
indexOf compares searchElement to elements of the Array using strict equality (the same method used
by the ===, or triple-equals, operator).
var array = [2, 5, 9];
var index = array.indexOf(2);
// index is 0
index = array.indexOf(7);
// index is -1
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- searchElement : MixedElement to locate in the array. 
- fromIndex : Number (optional)The index at which to begin the search. Defaults to 0, i.e. the whole array will be searched. If the index is greater than or equal to the length of the array, -1 is returned, i.e. the array will not be searched. If negative, it is taken as the offset from the end of the array. Note that even when the index is negative, the array is still searched from front to back. If the calculated index is less than 0, the whole array will be searched. 
Returns
- NumberThe index of element found or -1. 
Joins all elements of an array into a string.
The string conversions of all array elements are joined into one string.
The following example creates an array, a, with three elements, then joins the array three times:
using the default separator, then a comma and a space, and then a plus.
var a = new Array("Wind","Rain","Fire");
var myVar1 = a.join();      // assigns "Wind,Rain,Fire" to myVar1
var myVar2 = a.join(", ");  // assigns "Wind, Rain, Fire" to myVar2
var myVar3 = a.join(" + "); // assigns "Wind + Rain + Fire" to myVar3
Parameters
- separator : StringSpecifies a string to separate each element of the array. The separator is converted to a string if necessary. If omitted, the array elements are separated with a comma. 
Returns
- StringA string of the array elements. 
Returns the last index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
The array is searched backwards, starting at fromIndex.
lastIndexOf compares searchElement to elements of the Array using strict equality (the same method
used by the ===, or triple-equals, operator).
var array = [2, 5, 9, 2];
var index = array.lastIndexOf(2);
// index is 3
index = array.lastIndexOf(7);
// index is -1
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, 3);
// index is 3
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, 2);
// index is 0
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, -2);
// index is 0
index = array.lastIndexOf(2, -1);
// index is 3
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- searchElement : MixedElement to locate in the array. 
- fromIndex : Number (optional)The index at which to start searching backwards. Defaults to the array's length, i.e. the whole array will be searched. If the index is greater than or equal to the length of the array, the whole array will be searched. If negative, it is taken as the offset from the end of the array. Note that even when the index is negative, the array is still searched from back to front. If the calculated index is less than 0, -1 is returned, i.e. the array will not be searched. 
Returns
- NumberThe index of element found or -1. 
Creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function on every element in this array.
map calls a provided callback function once for each element in
an array, in order, and constructs a new array from the
results. callback is invoked only for indexes of the array which
have assigned values; it is not invoked for indexes which have been
deleted or which have never been assigned values.
If a thisArg parameter is provided to map, it will be used as the
this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not provided, or
is null, the global object associated with callback is used
instead.
map does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by map is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements which are appended to the array
after the call to map begins will not be visited by callback. If
existing elements of the array are changed, or deleted, their value
as passed to callback will be the value at the time map visits
them; elements that are deleted are not visited.
The following code creates an array of "plural" forms of nouns from an array of their singular forms.
function fuzzyPlural(single) {
  var result = single.replace(/o/g, 'e');
  if( single === 'kangaroo'){
    result += 'se';
  }
  return result;
}
var words = ["foot", "goose", "moose", "kangaroo"];
console.log(words.map(fuzzyPlural));
// ["feet", "geese", "meese", "kangareese"]
The following code takes an array of numbers and creates a new array containing the square roots of the numbers in the first array.
var numbers = [1, 4, 9];
var roots = numbers.map(Math.sqrt);
// roots is now [1, 2, 3], numbers is still [1, 4, 9]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- ArrayArray of the return values of callbackfunction.
The pop method removes the last element from an array and returns that value to the caller.
pop is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
var popped = myFish.pop();
alert(popped); // Alerts 'surgeon'
Returns
- ObjectThe last element in the array 
Adds one or more elements to the end of an array and returns the new length of the array.
push is intentionally generic. This method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. The push method relies on a length property to determine where to start inserting
the given values. If the length property cannot be converted into a number, the index used
is 0. This includes the possibility of length being nonexistent, in which case length will
also be created.
The only native, array-like objects are strings, although they are not suitable in applications of this method, as strings are immutable.
Adding elements to an array
The following code creates the sports array containing two elements, then appends two elements to it. After the code executes, sports contains 4 elements: "soccer", "baseball", "football" and "swimming".
var sports = ["soccer", "baseball"];
sports.push("football", "swimming");
Parameters
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the end of the array. 
Returns
- NumberThe new length property of the object upon which the method was called. 
Applies a function against an accumulator and each value of the array (from left-to-right) as to reduce it to a single value.
reduce executes the callback function once for each element
present in the array, excluding holes in the array.
The first time the callback is called, previousValue and
currentValue can be one of two values. If initialValue is
provided in the call to reduce, then previousValue will be equal to
initialValue and currentValue will be equal to the first value in
the array. If no initialValue was provided, then previousValue will
be equal to the first value in the array and currentValue will be
equal to the second.
Suppose the following use of reduce occurred:
[0,1,2,3,4].reduce(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array){
  return previousValue + currentValue;
}
The callback would be invoked four times, with the arguments and return values in each call being as follows:
| previousValue | currentValue | index | array | return value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| first call | 0 | 1 | 1 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 1 | 
| second call | 1 | 2 | 2 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 3 | 
| third call | 3 | 3 | 3 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 6 | 
| fourth call | 6 | 4 | 4 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 10 | 
The value returned by reduce would be that of the last callback
invocation (10).
If you were to provide an initial value as the second argument to reduce, the result would look like this:
[0,1,2,3,4].reduce(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array){
  return previousValue + currentValue;
}, 10);
| previousValue | currentValue | index | array | return value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| first call | 10 | 0 | 0 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 10 | 
| second call | 10 | 1 | 1 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 11 | 
| third call | 11 | 2 | 2 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 13 | 
| fourth call | 13 | 3 | 3 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 16 | 
| fifth call | 16 | 4 | 4 | [0,1,2,3,4] | 20 | 
The value returned by reduce this time would be, of course, 20.
Example: Sum up all values within an array:
var total = [0, 1, 2, 3].reduce(function(a, b) {
    return a + b;
}
// total == 6
Example: Flatten an array of arrays:
var flattened = [[0, 1], [2, 3], [4, 5]].reduce(function(a, b) {
    return a.concat(b);
}
// flattened is [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- callback : FunctionFunction to execute on each value in the array. Parameters- previousValue : MixedThe value previously returned in the last invocation of the callback, orinitialValue, if supplied.
- currentValue : MixedThe current element being processed in the array. 
- index : NumberThe index of the current element being processed in the array. 
- array : ArrayThe array reducewas called upon.
 
- previousValue : Mixed
- initialValue : Mixed (optional)Object to use as the first argument to the first call of the callback.
Returns
- MixedThe value returned by final invocation of the callback.
Applies a function simultaneously against two values of the array (from right-to-left) as to reduce it to a single value.
reduceRight executes the callback function once for each
element present in the array, excluding holes in the array.
The first time the callback is called, previousValue and
currentValue can be one of two values. If initialValue is
provided in the call to reduceRight, then previousValue will be equal to
initialValue and currentValue will be equal to the last value in
the array. If no initialValue was provided, then previousValue will
be equal to the last value in the array and currentValue will be
equal to the second-to-last value.
Some example run-throughs of the function would look like this:
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4].reduceRight(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array) {
    return previousValue + currentValue;
}
// First call
previousValue = 4, currentValue = 3, index = 3
// Second call
previousValue = 7, currentValue = 2, index = 2
// Third call
previousValue = 9, currentValue = 1, index = 1
// Fourth call
previousValue = 10, currentValue = 0, index = 0
// array is always the object [0,1,2,3,4] upon which reduceRight was called
// Return Value: 10
And if you were to provide an initialValue, the result would look like this:
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4].reduceRight(function(previousValue, currentValue, index, array) {
    return previousValue + currentValue;
}, 10);
// First call
previousValue = 10, currentValue = 4, index = 4
// Second call
previousValue = 14, currentValue = 3, index = 3
// Third call
previousValue = 17, currentValue = 2, index = 2
// Fourth call
previousValue = 19, currentValue = 1, index = 1
// Fifth call
previousValue = 20, currentValue = 0, index = 0
// array is always the object [0,1,2,3,4] upon which reduceRight was called
// Return Value: 20
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- callback : FunctionFunction to execute on each value in the array. Parameters- previousValue : MixedThe value previously returned in the last invocation of the callback, orinitialValue, if supplied.
- currentValue : MixedThe current element being processed in the array. 
- index : NumberThe index of the current element being processed in the array. 
- array : ArrayThe array reduceRightwas called upon.
 
- previousValue : Mixed
- initialValue : Mixed (optional)Object to use as the first argument to the first call of the callback.
Returns
- MixedThe value returned by final invocation of the callback.
Reverses the order of the elements of an array -- the first becomes the last, and the last becomes the first.
The reverse method transposes the elements of the calling array object in place, mutating the array, and returning a reference to the array.
The following example creates an array myArray, containing three elements, then reverses the array.
var myArray = ["one", "two", "three"];
myArray.reverse();
This code changes myArray so that:
- myArray[0] is "three"
- myArray[1] is "two"
- myArray[2] is "one"
Returns
- ArrayA reference to the array 
Removes the first element from an array and returns that element.
The shift method removes the element at the zeroeth index and shifts the values at consecutive
indexes down, then returns the removed value.
shift is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
The following code displays the myFish array before and after removing its first element. It also
displays the removed element:
// assumes a println function is defined
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
println("myFish before: " + myFish);
var shifted = myFish.shift();
println("myFish after: " + myFish);
println("Removed this element: " + shifted);
This example displays the following:
myFish before: angel,clown,mandarin,surgeon
myFish after: clown,mandarin,surgeon
Removed this element: angel
Returns
- ObjectThe first element of the array prior to shifting. 
Extracts a section of an array and returns a new array.
slice does not alter the original array, but returns a new "one level deep" copy that contains
copies of the elements sliced from the original array. Elements of the original array are copied
into the new array as follows:
*   For object references (and not the actual object), slice copies object references into the
new array. Both the original and new array refer to the same object. If a referenced object
changes, the changes are visible to both the new and original arrays.
*   For strings and numbers (not String and Number objects), slice copies strings
and numbers into the new array. Changes to the string or number in one array does not affect the
other array.
If a new element is added to either array, the other array is not affected.
Using slice
In the following example, slice creates a new array, newCar, from myCar. Both include a
reference to the object myHonda. When the color of myHonda is changed to purple, both arrays
reflect the change.
// Using slice, create newCar from myCar.
var myHonda = { color: "red", wheels: 4, engine: { cylinders: 4, size: 2.2 } };
var myCar = [myHonda, 2, "cherry condition", "purchased 1997"];
var newCar = myCar.slice(0, 2);
// Print the values of myCar, newCar, and the color of myHonda
//  referenced from both arrays.
print("myCar = " + myCar.toSource());
print("newCar = " + newCar.toSource());
print("myCar[0].color = " + myCar[0].color);
print("newCar[0].color = " + newCar[0].color);
// Change the color of myHonda.
myHonda.color = "purple";
print("The new color of my Honda is " + myHonda.color);
// Print the color of myHonda referenced from both arrays.
print("myCar[0].color = " + myCar[0].color);
print("newCar[0].color = " + newCar[0].color);
This script writes:
myCar = [{color:"red", wheels:4, engine:{cylinders:4, size:2.2}}, 2, "cherry condition",
"purchased 1997"]
newCar = [{color:"red", wheels:4, engine:{cylinders:4, size:2.2}}, 2]
myCar[0].color = red
newCar[0].color = red
The new color of my Honda is purple
myCar[0].color = purple
newCar[0].color = purple
Parameters
- begin : NumberZero-based index at which to begin extraction. As a negative index, startindicates an offset from the end of the sequence.slice(-2)extracts the second-to-last element and the last element in the sequence
- end : NumberZero-based index at which to end extraction. sliceextracts up to but not includingend.slice(1,4)extracts the second element through the fourth element (elements indexed 1, 2, and 3). As a negative index, end indicates an offset from the end of the sequence.slice(2,-1)extracts the third element through the second-to-last element in the sequence. Ifendis omitted,sliceextracts to the end of the sequence.
Returns
- ArrayArray from the new start position up to (but not including) the specified end position. 
Tests whether some element in the array passes the test implemented by the provided function.
some executes the callback function once for each element
present in the array until it finds one where callback returns a
true value. If such an element is found, some immediately returns
true. Otherwise, some returns false. callback is invoked only for
indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked
for indexes which have been deleted or which have never been
assigned values.
If a thisObject parameter is provided to some, it will be used as
the this for each invocation of the callback. If it is not
provided, or is null, the global object associated with callback is
used instead.
some does not mutate the array on which it is called.
The range of elements processed by some is set before the first
invocation of callback. Elements that are appended to the array
after the call to some begins will not be visited by callback. If
an existing, unvisited element of the array is changed by callback,
its value passed to the visiting callback will be the value at the
time that some visits that element's index; elements that are
deleted are not visited.
The following example tests whether some element in the array is bigger than 10.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
  return (element >= 10);
}
var passed = [2, 5, 8, 1, 4].some(isBigEnough);
// passed is false
passed = [12, 5, 8, 1, 4].some(isBigEnough);
// passed is true
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
Returns
- BooleanTrue when at least one element passes the test. 
Sorts the elements of an array.
If compareFunction is not supplied, elements are sorted by converting them to strings and
comparing strings in lexicographic ("dictionary" or "telephone book," not numerical) order. For
example, "80" comes before "9" in lexicographic order, but in a numeric sort 9 comes before 80.
If compareFunction is supplied, the array elements are sorted according to the return value of
the compare function. If a and b are two elements being compared, then:
If compareFunction(a, b) is less than 0, sort a to a lower index than b.
If compareFunction(a, b) returns 0, leave a and b unchanged with respect to each other, but
sorted with respect to all different elements. Note: the ECMAscript standard does not guarantee
this behaviour, and thus not all browsers respect this.
If compareFunction(a, b) is greater than 0, sort b to a lower index than a.
compareFunction(a, b) must always returns the same value when given a specific pair of elements a
and b as its two arguments. If inconsistent results are returned then the sort order is undefined
So, the compare function has the following form:
function compare(a, b)
{
    if (a is less than b by some ordering criterion)
        return -1;
    if (a is greater than b by the ordering criterion)
       return 1;
    // a must be equal to b
    return 0;
}
To compare numbers instead of strings, the compare function can simply subtract b from a:
function compareNumbers(a, b)
{
return a - b;
}
The sort() method can be conveniently used with closures:
var numbers = [4, 2, 5, 1, 3];
numbers.sort(function(a, b) {
    return a - b;
}
print(numbers);
Parameters
- compareFunction : FunctionSpecifies a function that defines the sort order. If omitted, the array is sorted lexicographically (in dictionary order) according to the string conversion of each element. 
Returns
- ArrayA reference to the array 
Adds and/or removes elements from an array.
If you specify a different number of elements to insert than the number you're removing, the array will have a different length at the end of the call.
// assumes a print function is defined
var myFish = ["angel", "clown", "mandarin", "surgeon"];
print("myFish: " + myFish);
var removed = myFish.splice(2, 0, "drum");
print("After adding 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(3, 1);
print("After removing 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(2, 1, "trumpet");
print("After replacing 1: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
removed = myFish.splice(0, 2, "parrot", "anemone", "blue");
print("After replacing 2: " + myFish);
print("removed is: " + removed);
This script displays:
myFish: angel,clown,mandarin,surgeon
After adding 1: angel,clown,drum,mandarin,surgeon
removed is:
After removing 1: angel,clown,drum,surgeon
removed is: mandarin
After replacing 1: angel,clown,trumpet,surgeon
removed is: drum
After replacing 2: parrot,anemone,blue,trumpet,surgeon
removed is: angel,clown
Parameters
- index : NumberIndex at which to start changing the array. If negative, will begin that many elements from the end. 
- howMany : NumberAn integer indicating the number of old array elements to remove. If howManyis 0, no elements are removed. In this case, you should specify at least one new element. If nohowManyparameter is specified all elements after index are removed.
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the array. If you don't specify any elements, splicesimply removes elements from the array.
Returns
- ArrayAn array containing the removed elements. If only one element is removed, an array of one element is returned.. 
Returns a string representing the array and its elements. Overrides the Object.prototype.toString
method.
The Array object overrides the toString method of Object. For Array objects, the
toString method joins the array and returns one string containing each array element separated by
commas. For example, the following code creates an array and uses toString to convert the array
to a string.
var monthNames = new Array("Jan","Feb","Mar","Apr");
myVar = monthNames.toString(); // assigns "Jan,Feb,Mar,Apr" to myVar
JavaScript calls the toString method automatically when an array is to be represented as a text
value or when an array is referred to in a string concatenation.
Returns
- StringThe array as a string. 
Adds one or more elements to the front of an array and returns the new length of the array.
The unshift method inserts the given values to the beginning of an array-like object.
unshift is intentionally generic; this method can be called or applied to objects resembling
arrays. Objects which do not contain a length property reflecting the last in a series of
consecutive, zero-based numerical properties may not behave in any meaningful manner.
The following code displays the myFish array before and after adding elements to it.
// assumes a println function exists
myFish = ["angel", "clown"];
println("myFish before: " + myFish);
unshifted = myFish.unshift("drum", "lion");
println("myFish after: " + myFish);
println("New length: " + unshifted);
This example displays the following:
myFish before: ["angel", "clown"]
myFish after: ["drum", "lion", "angel", "clown"]
New length: 4
Parameters
- elements : Object...The elements to add to the front of the array. 
Returns
- NumberThe array's new length. 
Static methods Returns true if an object is an array, false if it is not. ...Returns true if an object is an array, false if it is not.
// all following calls return true
Array.isArray([]);
Array.isArray([1]);
Array.isArray( new Array() );
Array.isArray( Array.prototype ); // Little known fact: Array.prototype itself is an array.
// all following calls return false
Array.isArray();
Array.isArray({}
Array.isArray(null);
Array.isArray(undefined);
Array.isArray(17);
Array.isArray("Array");
Array.isArray(true);
Array.isArray(false);
Array.isArray({ __proto__ : Array.prototype }
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- obj : MixedThe object to be checked. 
Returns
- BooleanTrue when Array. 
Returns true if an object is an array, false if it is not.
// all following calls return true
Array.isArray([]);
Array.isArray([1]);
Array.isArray( new Array() );
Array.isArray( Array.prototype ); // Little known fact: Array.prototype itself is an array.
// all following calls return false
Array.isArray();
Array.isArray({}
Array.isArray(null);
Array.isArray(undefined);
Array.isArray(17);
Array.isArray("Array");
Array.isArray(true);
Array.isArray(false);
Array.isArray({ __proto__ : Array.prototype }
NOTE: This method is part of the ECMAScript 5 standard.
Parameters
- obj : MixedThe object to be checked. 
Returns
- BooleanTrue when Array.