The forEach()
method of Array instances executes a provided function once
for each array element.
Syntax
forEach(callbackFn)
forEach(callbackFn, thisArg)
Parameters
callbackFn
- : A function to execute for each element in the array. Its return value is discarded. The function is called with the following arguments:
element
- : The current element being processed in the array.
index
- : The index of the current element being processed in the array.
array
- : The array
forEach()
was called upon.
- : The array
- : A function to execute for each element in the array. Its return value is discarded. The function is called with the following arguments:
thisArg
- : A value to use as
this
when executingcallbackFn
. See iterative methods.
- : A value to use as
Return value
None (undefined).
Description
The forEach()
method is an iterative method. It calls a provided callbackFn
function once for each element in an array in ascending-index order. Unlike map(), forEach()
always returns undefined and is not chainable. The typical use case is to execute side effects at the end of a chain.
callbackFn
is invoked only for array indexes which have assigned values. It is not invoked for empty slots in sparse arrays.
forEach()
does not mutate the array on which it is called, but the function provided as callbackFn
can. Note, however, that the length of the array is saved before the first invocation of callbackFn
. Therefore:
callbackFn
will not visit any elements added beyond the array's initial length when the call toforEach()
began.- Changes to already-visited indexes do not cause
callbackFn
to be invoked on them again. - If an existing, yet-unvisited element of the array is changed by
callbackFn
, its value passed to thecallbackFn
will be the value at the time that element gets visited. Deleted elements are not visited.
Warning: Concurrent modifications of the kind described above frequently lead to hard-to-understand code and are generally to be avoided (except in special cases).
The forEach()
method is generic. It only expects the this
value to have a length
property and integer-keyed properties.
There is no way to stop or break a forEach()
loop other than by throwing an exception. If you need such behavior, the forEach()
method is the wrong tool.
Early termination may be accomplished with looping statements like for
, for...of
, and for...in
. Array methods like every(), some(), find(), and findIndex() also stops iteration immediately when further iteration is not necessary.
forEach()
expects a synchronous function — it does not wait for promises. Make sure you are aware of the implications while using promises (or async functions) as forEach
callbacks.
const ratings = [5, 4, 5];
let sum = 0;
const sumFunction = async (a, b) => a + b;
ratings.forEach(async (rating) => {
sum = await sumFunction(sum, rating);
});
console.log(sum);
// Naively expected output: 14
// Actual output: 0
To run a series of asynchronous operations sequentially or concurrently, see promise composition.
Examples
Using forEach() on sparse arrays
const arraySparse = [1, 3, /* empty */, 7];
let numCallbackRuns = 0;
arraySparse.forEach((element) => {
console.log({ element });
numCallbackRuns++;
});
console.log({ numCallbackRuns });
// { element: 1 }
// { element: 3 }
// { element: 7 }
// { numCallbackRuns: 3 }
The callback function is not invoked for the missing value at index 2.
Converting a for loop to forEach
const items = ["item1", "item2", "item3"];
const copyItems = [];
// before
for (let i = 0; i < items.length; i++) {
copyItems.push(items[i]);
}
// after
items.forEach((item) => {
copyItems.push(item);
});
Printing the contents of an array
Note: In order to display the content of an array in the console, you can use , which prints a formatted version of the array.
The following example illustrates an alternative approach, using
forEach()
.
The following code logs a line for each element in an array:
const logArrayElements = (element, index /*, array */) => {
console.log(`a[${index}] = ${element}`);
};
// Notice that index 2 is skipped, since there is no item at
// that position in the array.
[2, 5, , 9].forEach(logArrayElements);
// Logs:
// a[0] = 2
// a[1] = 5
// a[3] = 9
Using thisArg
The following (contrived) example updates an object's properties from each entry in the array:
class Counter {
constructor() {
this.sum = 0;
this.count = 0;
}
add(array) {
// Only function expressions will have its own this binding
array.forEach(function countEntry(entry) {
this.sum += entry;
++this.count;
}, this);
}
}
const obj = new Counter();
obj.add([2, 5, 9]);
console.log(obj.count); // 3
console.log(obj.sum); // 16
Since the thisArg
parameter (this
) is provided to
forEach()
, it is passed to callback
each time it's
invoked. The callback uses it as its this
value.
Note: If passing the callback function used an arrow function expression, the
thisArg
parameter could be omitted, since all arrow functions lexically bind the this value.
An object copy function
The following code creates a copy of a given object.
There are different ways to create a copy of an object. The following is just one way
and is presented to explain how Array.prototype.forEach()
works by using
Object.*
utility functions.
const copy = (obj) => {
const copy = Object.create(Object.getPrototypeOf(obj));
const propNames = Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj);
propNames.forEach((name) => {
const desc = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(obj, name);
Object.defineProperty(copy, name, desc);
});
return copy;
};
const obj1 = { a: 1, b: 2 };
const obj2 = copy(obj1); // obj2 looks like obj1 now
Modifying the array during iteration
The following example logs one
, two
, four
.
When the entry containing the value two
is reached, the first entry of the
whole array is shifted off—resulting in all remaining entries moving up one position.
Because element four
is now at an earlier position in the array,
three
will be skipped.
forEach()
does not make a copy of the array before iterating.
const words = ["one", "two", "three", "four"];
words.forEach((word) => {
console.log(word);
if (word === "two") {
words.shift(); //'one' will delete from array
}
}); // one // two // four
console.log(words); // ['two', 'three', 'four']
Flatten an array
The following example is only here for learning purpose. If you want to flatten an array using built-in methods, you can use Array.prototype.flat.
const flatten = (arr) => {
const result = [];
arr.forEach((item) => {
if (Array.isArray(item)) {
result.push(...flatten(item));
} else {
result.push(item);
}
});
return result;
};
// Usage
const nested = [1, 2, 3, [4, 5, [6, 7], 8, 9]];
console.log(flatten(nested)); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Calling forEach() on non-array objects
The forEach()
method reads the length
property of this
and then accesses each property whose key is a nonnegative integer less than length
.
const arrayLike = {
length: 3,
0: 2,
1: 3,
2: 4,
3: 5, // ignored by forEach() since length is 3
};
Array.prototype.forEach.call(arrayLike, (x) => console.log(x));
// 2
// 3
// 4