How do I remove a specific value from an array? Something like:
array.remove(value);
Constraints: I have to use core JavaScript. Frameworks are not allowed.
How do I remove a specific value from an array? Something like:
array.remove(value);
Constraints: I have to use core JavaScript. Frameworks are not allowed.
On
Array.prototype.removeByValue = function (val) {
for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) {
if (this[i] === val) {
this.splice(i, 1);
i--;
}
}
return this;
}
var fruits = ['apple', 'banana', 'carrot', 'orange'];
fruits.removeByValue('banana');
console.log(fruits);
// -> ['apple', 'carrot', 'orange']
On
I don't know how you are expecting array.remove(int) to behave. There are three possibilities I can think of that you might want.
To remove an element of an array at an index i:
array.splice(i, 1);
If you want to remove every element with value number from the array:
for (var i = array.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (array[i] === number) {
array.splice(i, 1);
}
}
If you just want to make the element at index i no longer exist, but you don't want the indexes of the other elements to change:
delete array[i];
On
It depends on whether you want to keep an empty spot or not.
If you do want an empty slot:
array[index] = undefined;
If you don't want an empty slot:
//To keep the original:
//oldArray = [...array];
//This modifies the array.
array.splice(index, 1);
And if you need the value of that item, you can just store the returned array's element:
var value = array.splice(index, 1)[0];
If you want to remove at either end of the array, you can use array.pop() for the last one or array.shift() for the first one (both return the value of the item as well).
If you don't know the index of the item, you can use array.indexOf(item) to get it (in a if() to get one item or in a while() to get all of them). array.indexOf(item) returns either the index or -1 if not found.
On
If you want a new array with the deleted positions removed, you can always delete the specific element and filter out the array. It might need an extension of the array object for browsers that don't implement the filter method, but in the long term it's easier since all you do is this:
var my_array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
delete my_array[4];
console.log(my_array.filter(function(a){return typeof a !== 'undefined';}));
It should display [1, 2, 3, 4, 6].
On
There are two major approaches
splice(): anArray.splice(index, 1);
let fruits = ['Apple', 'Banana', 'Mango', 'Orange']
let removed = fruits.splice(2, 1);
// fruits is ['Apple', 'Banana', 'Orange']
// removed is ['Mango']
delete: delete anArray[index];
let fruits = ['Apple', 'Banana', 'Mango', 'Orange']
let removed = delete fruits(2);
// fruits is ['Apple', 'Banana', undefined, 'Orange']
// removed is true
Be careful when you use the delete for an array. It is good for deleting attributes of objects, but not so good for arrays. It is better to use splice for arrays.
Keep in mind that when you use delete for an array you could get wrong results for anArray.length. In other words, delete would remove the element, but it wouldn't update the value of the length property.
You can also expect to have holes in index numbers after using delete, e.g. you could end up with having indexes 1, 3, 4, 8, 9, and 11 and length as it was before using delete. In that case, all indexed for loops would crash, since indexes are no longer sequential.
If you are forced to use delete for some reason, then you should use for each loops when you need to loop through arrays. As the matter of fact, always avoid using indexed for loops, if possible. That way the code would be more robust and less prone to problems with indexes.
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Update: This method is recommended only if you cannot use ECMAScript 2015 (formerly known as ES6). If you can use it, other answers here provide much neater implementations.
This gist here will solve your problem, and also deletes all occurrences of the argument instead of just 1 (or a specified value).
Array.prototype.destroy = function(obj){
// Return null if no objects were found and removed
var destroyed = null;
for(var i = 0; i < this.length; i++){
// Use while-loop to find adjacent equal objects
while(this[i] === obj){
// Remove this[i] and store it within destroyed
destroyed = this.splice(i, 1)[0];
}
}
return destroyed;
}
Usage:
var x = [1, 2, 3, 3, true, false, undefined, false];
x.destroy(3); // => 3
x.destroy(false); // => false
x; // => [1, 2, true, undefined]
x.destroy(true); // => true
x.destroy(undefined); // => undefined
x; // => [1, 2]
x.destroy(3); // => null
x; // => [1, 2]
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Check out this code. It works in every major browser.
remove_item = function(arr, value) {
var b = '';
for (b in arr) {
if (arr[b] === value) {
arr.splice(b, 1);
break;
}
}
return arr;
};
var array = [1,3,5,6,5,9,5,3,55]
var res = remove_item(array,5);
console.log(res)
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You can iterate over each array-item and splice it if it exists in your array.
function destroy(arr, val) {
for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) if (arr[i] === val) arr.splice(i, 1);
return arr;
}
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Create new array:
var my_array = new Array();
Add elements to this array:
my_array.push("element1");
The function indexOf (returns index or -1 when not found):
var indexOf = function(needle)
{
if (typeof Array.prototype.indexOf === 'function') // Newer browsers
{
indexOf = Array.prototype.indexOf;
}
else // Older browsers
{
indexOf = function(needle)
{
var index = -1;
for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++)
{
if (this[i] === needle)
{
index = i;
break;
}
}
return index;
};
}
return indexOf.call(this, needle);
};
Check index of this element (tested with Firefox and Internet Explorer 8 (and later)):
var index = indexOf.call(my_array, "element1");
Remove 1 element located at index from the array
my_array.splice(index, 1);
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A friend was having issues in Internet Explorer 8 and showed me what he did. I told him it was wrong, and he told me he got the answer here. The current top answer will not work in all browsers (Internet Explorer 8 for example), and it will only remove the first occurrence of the item.
function removeAllInstances(arr, item) {
for (var i = arr.length; i--;) {
if (arr[i] === item) arr.splice(i, 1);
}
}
It loops through the array backwards (since indices and length will change as items are removed) and removes the item if it's found. It works in all browsers.
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You can do a backward loop to make sure not to screw up the indexes, if there are multiple instances of the element.
var myElement = "chocolate";
var myArray = ['chocolate', 'poptart', 'poptart', 'poptart', 'chocolate', 'poptart', 'poptart', 'chocolate'];
/* Important code */
for (var i = myArray.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (myArray[i] == myElement) myArray.splice(i, 1);
}
console.log(myArray);
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John Resig posted a good implementation:
// Array Remove - By John Resig (MIT Licensed)
Array.prototype.remove = function(from, to) {
var rest = this.slice((to || from) + 1 || this.length);
this.length = from < 0 ? this.length + from : from;
return this.push.apply(this, rest);
};
If you don’t want to extend a global object, you can do something like the following, instead:
// Array Remove - By John Resig (MIT Licensed)
Array.remove = function(array, from, to) {
var rest = array.slice((to || from) + 1 || array.length);
array.length = from < 0 ? array.length + from : from;
return array.push.apply(array, rest);
};
But the main reason I am posting this is to warn users against the alternative implementation suggested in the comments on that page (Dec 14, 2007):
Array.prototype.remove = function(from, to) {
this.splice(from, (to=[0, from || 1, ++to - from][arguments.length]) < 0 ? this.length + to : to);
return this.length;
};
It seems to work well at first, but through a painful process I discovered it fails when trying to remove the second to last element in an array. For example, if you have a 10-element array and you try to remove the 9th element with this:
myArray.remove(8);
You end up with an 8-element array. I don't know why, but I confirmed John's original implementation doesn't have this problem.
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There isn't any need to use indexOf or splice. However, it performs better if you only want to remove one occurrence of an element.
Find and move (move):
function move(arr, val) {
var j = 0;
for (var i = 0, l = arr.length; i < l; i++) {
if (arr[i] !== val) {
arr[j++] = arr[i];
}
}
arr.length = j;
}
Use indexOf and splice (indexof):
function indexof(arr, val) {
var i;
while ((i = arr.indexOf(val)) != -1) {
arr.splice(i, 1);
}
}
Use only splice (splice):
function splice(arr, val) {
for (var i = arr.length; i--;) {
if (arr[i] === val) {
arr.splice(i, 1);
}
}
}
Run-times on Node.js for an array with 1000 elements (averaged over 10,000 runs):
indexof is approximately 10 times slower than move. Even if improved by removing the call to indexOf in splice, it performs much worse than move.
Remove all occurrences:
move 0.0048 ms
indexof 0.0463 ms
splice 0.0359 ms
Remove first occurrence:
move_one 0.0041 ms
indexof_one 0.0021 ms
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Array.prototype.removeItem = function(a) {
for (i = 0; i < this.length; i++) {
if (this[i] == a) {
for (i2 = i; i2 < this.length - 1; i2++) {
this[i2] = this[i2 + 1];
}
this.length = this.length - 1
return;
}
}
}
var recentMovies = ['Iron Man', 'Batman', 'Superman', 'Spiderman'];
recentMovies.removeItem('Superman');
On
I also ran into the situation where I had to remove an element from Array. .indexOf was not working in Internet Explorer, so I am sharing my working jQuery.inArray() solution:
var index = jQuery.inArray(val, arr);
if (index > -1) {
arr.splice(index, 1);
//console.log(arr);
}
On
Edited on 2016 October
In this code example I use array.filter(...) function to remove unwanted items from an array. This function doesn't change the original array and creates a new one. If your browser doesn't support this function (e.g. Internet Explorer before version 9, or Firefox before version 1.5), consider polyfilling with core-js.
Be mindful though, creating a new array every time takes a big performance hit. If the list is very large (think 10k+ items) then consider using other methods.
var value = 3
var arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3]
arr = arr.filter(function(item) {
return item !== value
})
console.log(arr)
// [ 1, 2, 4, 5 ]
let value = 3
let arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3]
arr = arr.filter(item => item !== value)
console.log(arr)
// [ 1, 2, 4, 5 ]
IMPORTANT ECMAScript 6 () => {} arrow function syntax is not supported in Internet Explorer at all, Chrome before version 45, Firefox before version 22, and Safari before version 10. To use ECMAScript 6 syntax in old browsers you can use BabelJS.
An additional advantage of this method is that you can remove multiple items
let forDeletion = [2, 3, 5]
let arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3]
arr = arr.filter(item => !forDeletion.includes(item))
// !!! Read below about array.includes(...) support !!!
console.log(arr)
// [ 1, 4 ]
IMPORTANT array.includes(...) function is not supported in Internet Explorer at all, Chrome before version 47, Firefox before version 43, Safari before version 9, and Edge before version 14 but you can polyfill with core-js.
If the "This-Binding Syntax" proposal is ever accepted, you'll be able to do this:
// array-lib.js
export function remove(...forDeletion) {
return this.filter(item => !forDeletion.includes(item))
}
// main.js
import { remove } from './array-lib.js'
let arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 3]
// :: This-Binding Syntax Proposal
// using "remove" function as "virtual method"
// without extending Array.prototype
arr = arr::remove(2, 3, 5)
console.log(arr)
// [ 1, 4 ]
Reference
On
I'm pretty new to JavaScript and needed this functionality. I merely wrote this:
function removeFromArray(array, item, index) {
while((index = array.indexOf(item)) > -1) {
array.splice(index, 1);
}
}
Then when I want to use it:
//Set-up some dummy data
var dummyObj = {name:"meow"};
var dummyArray = [dummyObj, "item1", "item1", "item2"];
//Remove the dummy data
removeFromArray(dummyArray, dummyObj);
removeFromArray(dummyArray, "item2");
Output - As expected. ["item1", "item1"]
You may have different needs than I, so you can easily modify it to suit them. I hope this helps someone.
On
Based on all the answers which were mainly correct and taking into account the best practices suggested (especially not using Array.prototype directly), I came up with the below code:
function arrayWithout(arr, values) {
var isArray = function(canBeArray) {
if (Array.isArray) {
return Array.isArray(canBeArray);
}
return Object.prototype.toString.call(canBeArray) === '[object Array]';
};
var excludedValues = (isArray(values)) ? values : [].slice.call(arguments, 1);
var arrCopy = arr.slice(0);
for (var i = arrCopy.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (excludedValues.indexOf(arrCopy[i]) > -1) {
arrCopy.splice(i, 1);
}
}
return arrCopy;
}
Reviewing the above function, despite the fact that it works fine, I realised there could be some performance improvement. Also using ES6 instead of ES5 is a much better approach. To that end, this is the improved code:
const arrayWithoutFastest = (() => {
const isArray = canBeArray => ('isArray' in Array)
? Array.isArray(canBeArray)
: Object.prototype.toString.call(canBeArray) === '[object Array]';
let mapIncludes = (map, key) => map.has(key);
let objectIncludes = (obj, key) => key in obj;
let includes;
function arrayWithoutFastest(arr, ...thisArgs) {
let withoutValues = isArray(thisArgs[0]) ? thisArgs[0] : thisArgs;
if (typeof Map !== 'undefined') {
withoutValues = withoutValues.reduce((map, value) => map.set(value, value), new Map());
includes = mapIncludes;
} else {
withoutValues = withoutValues.reduce((map, value) => { map[value] = value; return map; } , {});
includes = objectIncludes;
}
const arrCopy = [];
const length = arr.length;
for (let i = 0; i < length; i++) {
// If value is not in exclude list
if (!includes(withoutValues, arr[i])) {
arrCopy.push(arr[i]);
}
}
return arrCopy;
}
return arrayWithoutFastest;
})();
How to use:
const arr = [1,2,3,4,5,"name", false];
arrayWithoutFastest(arr, 1); // will return array [2,3,4,5,"name", false]
arrayWithoutFastest(arr, 'name'); // will return [2,3,4,5, false]
arrayWithoutFastest(arr, false); // will return [2,3,4,5]
arrayWithoutFastest(arr,[1,2]); // will return [3,4,5,"name", false];
arrayWithoutFastest(arr, {bar: "foo"}); // will return the same array (new copy)
I am currently writing a blog post in which I have benchmarked several solutions for Array without problem and compared the time it takes to run. I will update this answer with the link once I finish that post. Just to let you know, I have compared the above against lodash's without and in case the browser supports Map, it beats lodash! Notice that I am not using Array.prototype.indexOf or Array.prototype.includes as wrapping the exlcudeValues in a Map or Object makes querying faster!
On
I know there are a lot of answers already, but many of them seem to over complicate the problem. Here is a simple, recursive way of removing all instances of a key - calls self until index isn't found. Yes, it only works in browsers with indexOf, but it's simple and can be easily polyfilled.
Stand-alone function
function removeAll(array, key){
var index = array.indexOf(key);
if(index === -1) return;
array.splice(index, 1);
removeAll(array,key);
}
Prototype method
Array.prototype.removeAll = function(key){
var index = this.indexOf(key);
if(index === -1) return;
this.splice(index, 1);
this.removeAll(key);
}
On
You can do it easily with the filter method:
function remove(arrOriginal, elementToRemove){
return arrOriginal.filter(function(el){return el !== elementToRemove});
}
console.log(remove([1, 2, 1, 0, 3, 1, 4], 1));
This removes all elements from the array and also works faster than a combination of slice and indexOf.
On
You can use jQuery to help you!
I like this version of splice, removing an element by its value using $.inArray:
$(document).ready(function(){
var arr = ["C#","Ruby","PHP","C","C++"];
var itemtoRemove = "PHP";
arr.splice($.inArray(itemtoRemove, arr),1);
});
On
This provides a predicate instead of a value.
NOTE: it will update the given array, and return the affected rows.
var removed = helper.remove(arr, row => row.id === 5 );
var removed = helper.removeAll(arr, row => row.name.startsWith('BMW'));
var helper = {
// Remove and return the first occurrence
remove: function(array, predicate) {
for (var i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
if (predicate(array[i])) {
return array.splice(i, 1);
}
}
},
// Remove and return all occurrences
removeAll: function(array, predicate) {
var removed = [];
for (var i = 0; i < array.length; ) {
if (predicate(array[i])) {
removed.push(array.splice(i, 1));
continue;
}
i++;
}
return removed;
},
};
On
Underscore.js can be used to solve issues with multiple browsers. It uses in-build browser methods if present. If they are absent like in the case of older Internet Explorer versions it uses its own custom methods.
A simple example to remove elements from array (from the website):
_.without([1, 2, 1, 0, 3, 1, 4], 0, 1); // => [2, 3, 4]
On
var index,
input = [1,2,3],
indexToRemove = 1;
integers = [];
for (index in input) {
if (input.hasOwnProperty(index)) {
if (index !== indexToRemove) {
integers.push(result);
}
}
}
input = integers;
This solution will take an array of input and will search through the input for the value to remove. This will loop through the entire input array and the result will be a second array integers that has had the specific index removed. The integers array is then copied back into the input array.
On
Use jQuery's InArray:
A = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
A.splice($.inArray(3, A), 1);
//It will return A=[1, 2, 4, 5, 6]`
Note: inArray will return -1, if the element was not found.
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Removing the value with index and splice!
function removeArrValue(arr,value) {
var index = arr.indexOf(value);
if (index > -1) {
arr.splice(index, 1);
}
return arr;
}
On
If you must support older versions of Internet Explorer, I recommend using the following polyfill (note: this is not a framework). It's a 100% backwards-compatible replacement of all modern array methods (JavaScript 1.8.5 / ECMAScript 5 Array Extras) that works for Internet Explorer 6+, Firefox 1.5+, Chrome, Safari, & Opera.
On
There are many fantastic answers here, but for me, what worked most simply wasn't removing my element from the array completely, but simply setting the value of it to null.
This works for most cases I have and is a good solution since I will be using the variable later and don't want it gone, just empty for now. Also, this approach is completely cross-browser compatible.
array.key = null;
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If you have complex objects in the array you can use filters?
In situations where $.inArray or array.splice is not as easy to use. Especially if the objects are perhaps shallow in the array.
E.g. if you have an object with an id field and you want the object removed from an array:
this.array = this.array.filter(function(element, i) {
return element.id !== idToRemove;
});
On
You can use lodash _.pull (mutate array), _.pullAt (mutate array) or _.without (does't mutate array),
var array1 = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
_.pull(array1, 'c')
console.log(array1) // ['a', 'b', 'd']
var array2 = ['e', 'f', 'g', 'h']
_.pullAt(array2, 0)
console.log(array2) // ['f', 'g', 'h']
var array3 = ['i', 'j', 'k', 'l']
var newArray = _.without(array3, 'i') // ['j', 'k', 'l']
console.log(array3) // ['i', 'j', 'k', 'l']
On
The following method will remove all entries of a given value from an array without creating a new array and with only one iteration which is superfast. And it works in ancient Internet Explorer 5.5 browser:
function removeFromArray(arr, removeValue) {
for (var i = 0, k = 0, len = arr.length >>> 0; i < len; i++) {
if (k > 0)
arr[i - k] = arr[i];
if (arr[i] === removeValue)
k++;
}
for (; k--;)
arr.pop();
}
var a = [0, 1, 0, 2, 0, 3];
document.getElementById('code').innerHTML =
'Initial array [' + a.join(', ') + ']';
//Initial array [0, 1, 0, 2, 0, 3]
removeFromArray(a, 0);
document.getElementById('code').innerHTML +=
'<br>Resulting array [' + a.join(', ') + ']';
//Resulting array [1, 2, 3]
<code id="code"></code>
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Remove last occurrence or all occurrences, or first occurrence?
var array = [2, 5, 9, 5];
// Remove last occurrence (or all occurrences)
for (var i = array.length; i--;) {
if (array[i] === 5) {
array.splice(i, 1);
break; // Remove this line to remove all occurrences
}
}
or
var array = [2, 5, 9, 5];
// Remove first occurrence
for (var i = 0; array.length; i++) {
if (array[i] === 5) {
array.splice(i, 1);
break; // Do not remove this line
}
}
On
By my solution you can remove one or more than one item in an array thanks to pure JavaScript. There is no need for another JavaScript library.
var myArray = [1,2,3,4,5]; // First array
var removeItem = function(array,value) { // My clear function
if(Array.isArray(value)) { // For multi remove
for(var i = array.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
for(var j = value.length - 1; j >= 0; j--) {
if(array[i] === value[j]) {
array.splice(i, 1);
};
}
}
}
else { // For single remove
for(var i = array.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if(array[i] === value) {
array.splice(i, 1);
}
}
}
}
removeItem(myArray,[1,4]); // myArray will be [2,3,5]
On
Vanilla JavaScript (ES5.1) – in place edition
Browser support: Internet Explorer 9 or later (detailed browser support)
/**
* Removes all occurences of the item from the array.
*
* Modifies the array “in place”, i.e. the array passed as an argument
* is modified as opposed to creating a new array. Also returns the modified
* array for your convenience.
*/
function removeInPlace(array, item) {
var foundIndex, fromIndex;
// Look for the item (the item can have multiple indices)
fromIndex = array.length - 1;
foundIndex = array.lastIndexOf(item, fromIndex);
while (foundIndex !== -1) {
// Remove the item (in place)
array.splice(foundIndex, 1);
// Bookkeeping
fromIndex = foundIndex - 1;
foundIndex = array.lastIndexOf(item, fromIndex);
}
// Return the modified array
return array;
}
Vanilla JavaScript (ES5.1) – immutable edition
Browser support: Same as vanilla JavaScript in place edition
/**
* Removes all occurences of the item from the array.
*
* Returns a new array with all the items of the original array except
* the specified item.
*/
function remove(array, item) {
var arrayCopy;
arrayCopy = array.slice();
return removeInPlace(arrayCopy, item);
}
Vanilla ES6 – immutable edition
Browser support: Chrome 46, Edge 12, Firefox 16, Opera 37, Safari 8 (detailed browser support)
/**
* Removes all occurences of the item from the array.
*
* Returns a new array with all the items of the original array except
* the specified item.
*/
function remove(array, item) {
// Copy the array
array = [...array];
// Look for the item (the item can have multiple indices)
let fromIndex = array.length - 1;
let foundIndex = array.lastIndexOf(item, fromIndex);
while (foundIndex !== -1) {
// Remove the item by generating a new array without it
array = [
...array.slice(0, foundIndex),
...array.slice(foundIndex + 1),
];
// Bookkeeping
fromIndex = foundIndex - 1;
foundIndex = array.lastIndexOf(item, fromIndex)
}
// Return the new array
return array;
}
On
A more modern, ECMAScript 2015 (formerly known as Harmony or ES 6) approach. Given:
const items = [1, 2, 3, 4];
const index = 2;
Then:
items.filter((x, i) => i !== index);
Yielding:
[1, 2, 4]
You can use Babel and a polyfill service to ensure this is well supported across browsers.
On
I think many of the JavaScript instructions are not well thought out for functional programming. Splice returns the deleted element where most of the time you need the reduced array. This is bad.
Imagine you are doing a recursive call and have to pass an array with one less item, probably without the current indexed item. Or imagine you are doing another recursive call and has to pass an array with an element pushed.
In neither of these cases you can do myRecursiveFunction(myArr.push(c)) or myRecursiveFunction(myArr.splice(i,1)). The first idiot will in fact pass the length of the array and the second idiot will pass the deleted element as a parameter.
So what I do in fact... For deleting an array element and passing the resulting to a function as a parameter at the same time I do as follows
myRecursiveFunction(myArr.slice(0,i).concat(a.slice(i+1)))
When it comes to push that's more silly... I do like,
myRecursiveFunction((myArr.push(c),myArr))
I believe in a proper functional language a method mutating the object it's called upon must return a reference to the very object as a result.
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Array.prototype.remove = function(x) {
var y=this.slice(x+1);
var z=[];
for(i=0;i<=x-1;i++) {
z[z.length] = this[i];
}
for(i=0;i<y.length;i++){
z[z.length]=y[i];
}
return z;
}
On
Use jQuery.grep():
var y = [1, 2, 3, 9, 4]
var removeItem = 9;
y = jQuery.grep(y, function(value) {
return value != removeItem;
});
console.log(y)
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.12.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
On
I made a fairly efficient extension to the base JavaScript array:
Array.prototype.drop = function(k) {
var valueIndex = this.indexOf(k);
while(valueIndex > -1) {
this.removeAt(valueIndex);
valueIndex = this.indexOf(k);
}
};
On
You can use ES6. For example to delete the value '3' in this case:
var array=['1','2','3','4','5','6']
var newArray = array.filter((value)=>value!='3');
console.log(newArray);
Output :
["1", "2", "4", "5", "6"]
On
ES6 & without mutation: (October 2016)
const removeByIndex = (list, index) =>
[
...list.slice(0, index),
...list.slice(index + 1)
];
output = removeByIndex([33,22,11,44],1) //=> [33,11,44]
console.log(output)
On
While most of the previous answers answer the question, it is not clear enough why the slice() method has not been used. Yes, filter() meets the immutability criteria, but how about doing the following shorter equivalent?
const myArray = [1,2,3,4];
And now let’s say that we should remove the second element from the array, we can simply do:
const newArray = myArray.slice(0, 1).concat(myArray.slice(2, 4));
// [1,3,4]
This way of deleting an element from an array is strongly encouraged today in the community due to its simple and immutable nature. In general, methods which cause mutation should be avoided. For example, you are encouraged to replace push() with concat() and splice() with slice().
On
I made a function:
function pop(valuetoremove, myarray) {
var indexofmyvalue = myarray.indexOf(valuetoremove);
myarray.splice(indexofmyvalue, 1);
}
And used it like this:
pop(valuetoremove, myarray);
On
/**
* Removes one instance of `value` from `array`, without mutating the original array. Uses loose comparison.
*
* @param {Array} array Array to remove value from
* @param {*} value Value to remove
* @returns {Array} Array with `value` removed
*/
export function arrayRemove(array, value) {
for(let i=0; i<array.length; ++i) {
if(array[i] == value) {
let copy = [...array];
copy.splice(i, 1);
return copy;
}
}
return array;
}
On
Remove element at index i, without mutating the original array:
/**
* removeElement
* @param {Array} array
* @param {Number} index
*/
function removeElement(array, index) {
return Array.from(array).splice(index, 1);
}
// Another way is
function removeElement(array, index) {
return array.slice(0).splice(index, 1);
}
On
2017-05-08
Most of the given answers work for strict comparison, meaning that both objects reference the exact same object in memory (or are primitive types), but often you want to remove a non-primitive object from an array that has a certain value. For instance, if you make a call to a server and want to check a retrieved object against a local object.
const a = {'field': 2} // Non-primitive object
const b = {'field': 2} // Non-primitive object with same value
const c = a // Non-primitive object that reference the same object as "a"
assert(a !== b) // Don't reference the same item, but have same value
assert(a === c) // Do reference the same item, and have same value (naturally)
//Note: there are many alternative implementations for valuesAreEqual
function valuesAreEqual (x, y) {
return JSON.stringify(x) === JSON.stringify(y)
}
//filter will delete false values
//Thus, we want to return "false" if the item
// we want to delete is equal to the item in the array
function removeFromArray(arr, toDelete){
return arr.filter(target => {return !valuesAreEqual(toDelete, target)})
}
const exampleArray = [a, b, b, c, a, {'field': 2}, {'field': 90}];
const resultArray = removeFromArray(exampleArray, a);
//resultArray = [{'field':90}]
There are alternative/faster implementations for valuesAreEqual, but this does the job. You can also use a custom comparator if you have a specific field to check (for example, some retrieved UUID vs a local UUID).
Also note that this is a functional operation, meaning that it does not mutate the original array.
On
OK, for example you have the array below:
var num = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
And we want to delete number 4. You can simply use the below code:
num.splice(num.indexOf(4), 1); // num will be [1, 2, 3, 5];
If you are reusing this function, you write a reusable function which will be attached to the native array function like below:
Array.prototype.remove = Array.prototype.remove || function(x) {
const i = this.indexOf(x);
if(i===-1)
return;
this.splice(i, 1); // num.remove(5) === [1, 2, 3];
}
But how about if you have the below array instead with a few [5]s in the array?
var num = [5, 6, 5, 4, 5, 1, 5];
We need a loop to check them all, but an easier and more efficient way is using built-in JavaScript functions, so we write a function which use a filter like below instead:
const _removeValue = (arr, x) => arr.filter(n => n!==x);
//_removeValue([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 5], 5) // Return [1, 2, 3, 4, 6]
Also there are third-party libraries which do help you to do this, like Lodash or Underscore. For more information, look at lodash _.pull, _.pullAt or _.without.
On
Remove by Index
A function that returns a copy of array without the element at index:
/**
* removeByIndex
* @param {Array} array
* @param {Number} index
*/
function removeByIndex(array, index){
return array.filter(function(elem, _index){
return index != _index;
});
}
l = [1,3,4,5,6,7];
console.log(removeByIndex(l, 1));
$> [ 1, 4, 5, 6, 7 ]
Remove by Value
Function that return a copy of array without the Value.
/**
* removeByValue
* @param {Array} array
* @param {Number} value
*/
function removeByValue(array, value){
return array.filter(function(elem, _index){
return value != elem;
});
}
l = [1,3,4,5,6,7];
console.log(removeByValue(l, 5));
$> [ 1, 3, 4, 6, 7]
Find the
indexof the array element you want to remove usingindexOf, and then remove that index withsplice.The second parameter of
spliceis the number of elements to remove. Note thatsplicemodifies the array in place and returns a new array containing the elements that have been removed.For the reason of completeness, here are functions. The first function removes only a single occurrence (i.e. removing the first match of
5from[2,5,9,1,5,8,5]), while the second function removes all occurrences:In TypeScript, these functions can stay type-safe with a type parameter: