The forEach() method executes a provided function once for each array element.

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Syntax

arr .forEach( callback(currentValue [, index [, array]]) [, thisArg ])

Parameters

callback Function to execute on each element. It accepts between one and three arguments: currentValue The current element being processed in the array. index Optional The index of currentValue in the array. array Optional The array forEach() was called upon. thisArg Optional Value to use as this when executing callback .

Return value

undefined .

Description

forEach() calls a provided callback function once for each element in an array in ascending order. It is not invoked for index properties that have been deleted or are uninitialized. (For sparse arrays, see example below.)

callback is invoked with three arguments:

the value of the element the index of the element the Array object being traversed

If a thisArg parameter is provided to forEach() , it will be used as callback's this value. The thisArg value ultimately observable by callback is determined according to the usual rules for determining the this seen by a function.

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 before being visited are not visited. If elements that are already visited are removed (e.g. using shift() ) during the iteration, later elements will be skipped. (See this example, below.)

forEach() executes the callback function once for each array element; unlike map() or reduce() it always returns the value undefined and is not chainable. The typical use case is to execute side effects at the end of a chain.

forEach() does not mutate the array on which it is called. (However, callback may do so)

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: A simple for loop

A for...of / for...in loops

Array.prototype.every()

Array.prototype.some()

Array.prototype.find()

Array.prototype.findIndex() Array methods: every() , some() , find() , and findIndex() test the array elements with a predicate returning a truthy value to determine if further iteration is required.

forEach expects a synchronous function forEach does not wait for promises. Kindly make sure you are aware of the implications while using promises(or async functions) as forEach callback. Example Code let ratings = [5, 4, 5]; let sum = 0; let sumFunction = async function (a, b) { return a + b } ratings.forEach(async function(rating) { sum = await sumFunction(sum, rating) }) console.log(sum) // Naively expected output: 14 // Actual output: 0 does not wait for promises. Kindly make sure you are aware of the implications while using promises(or async functions) ascallback.

Examples

No operation for uninitialized values (sparse arrays)

const arraySparse = [1,3,,7] let numCallbackRuns = 0 arraySparse.forEach((element) => { console.log(element) numCallbackRuns++ }) console.log("numCallbackRuns: ", numCallbackRuns) // 1 // 3 // 7 // numCallbackRuns: 3 // comment: as you can see the missing value between 3 and 7 didn't invoke callback function.

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(function(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 console.table() , 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:

function 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:

function Counter() { this.sum = 0 this.count = 0 } Counter.prototype.add = function(array) { array.forEach((entry) => { this.sum += entry ++this.count }, this) // ^---- Note } const obj = new Counter() obj.add([2, 5, 9]) obj.count // 3 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 uses an arrow function expression, the thisArg parameter can 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 ECMAScript 5 Object.* meta property functions.

function 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.

let 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() .

function flatten(arr) { const result = [] arr.forEach((i) => { if (Array.isArray(i)) { result.push(...flatten(i)) } else { result.push(i) } }) return result } // Usage const nested = [1, 2, 3, [4, 5, [6, 7], 8, 9]] flatten(nested) // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

Specifications

Browser compatibility

The compatibility table in this page is generated from structured data. If you'd like to contribute to the data, please check out https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data and send us a pull request. Update compatibility data on GitHub Desktop Mobile Server Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari Android webview Chrome for Android Firefox for Android Opera for Android Safari on iOS Samsung Internet Node.js forEach Chrome Full support 1 Edge Full support 12 Firefox Full support 1.5 IE Full support 9 Opera Full support 9.5 Safari Full support 3 WebView Android Full support ≤37 Chrome Android Full support 18 Firefox Android Full support 4 Opera Android Full support 10.1 Safari iOS Full support 1 Samsung Internet Android Full support 1.0 nodejs Full support 0.1.100 Legend Full support Full support

See also