Get loop counter/index using for…of syntax in JavaScript

不羁岁月 提交于 2019-12-17 06:59:44

问题


Caution:

question still applies to for…of loops.> Don't use for…in to iterate over an Array, use it to iterate over the properties of an object. That said, this


I understand that the basic for…in syntax in JavaScript looks like this:

for (var obj in myArray) {
    // ...
}

But how do I get the loop counter/index?

I know I could probably do something like:

var i = 0;
for (var obj in myArray) {
    alert(i)
    i++
}

Or even the good old:

for (var i = 0; i < myArray.length; i++) {
    var obj = myArray[i]
    alert(i)
}

But I would rather use the simpler for-in loop. I think they look better and make more sense.

Is there a simpler or more elegant way?


In Python it's easy:

for i, obj in enumerate(myArray):
    print i

回答1:


for…in iterates over property names, not values, and does so in an unspecified order (yes, even after ES6). You shouldn’t use it to iterate over arrays. For them, there’s ES5’s forEach method that passes both the value and the index to the function you give it:

var myArray = [123, 15, 187, 32];

myArray.forEach(function (value, i) {
    console.log('%d: %s', i, value);
});

// Outputs:
// 0: 123
// 1: 15
// 2: 187
// 3: 32

Or ES6’s Array.prototype.entries, which now has support across current browser versions:

for (const [i, value] of myArray.entries()) {
    console.log('%d: %s', i, value);
}

For iterables in general (where you would use a for…of loop rather than a for…in), there’s nothing built-in, however:

function* enumerate(iterable) {
    let i = 0;

    for (const x of iterable) {
        yield [i, x];
        i++;
    }
}

for (const [i, obj] of enumerate(myArray)) {
    console.log(i, obj);
}

demo

If you actually did mean for…in – enumerating properties – you would need an additional counter. Object.keys(obj).forEach could work, but it only includes own properties; for…in includes enumerable properties anywhere on the prototype chain.




回答2:


In ES6, it is good to use for - of loop. You can get index in for of like this

for (let [index, val] of array.entries()) {
        // your code goes here    
}

Note that Array.entries() returns an iterator, which is what allows it to work in the for-of loop; don't confuse this with Object.entries(), which returns an array of key-value pairs.




回答3:


How about this

let numbers = [1,2,3,4,5]
numbers.forEach((number, index) => console.log(`${index}:${number}`))

Where array.forEach this method has an index parameter which is the index of the current element being processed in the array.




回答4:


Solution for small array collections:

for (var obj in arr) {
    var i = Object.keys(arr).indexOf(obj);
}

arr - ARRAY, obj - KEY of current element, i - COUNTER/INDEX

Notice: Method keys() is not available for IE version <9, you should use Polyfill code. https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/keys




回答5:


For-in-loops iterate over properties of an Object. Don't use them for Arrays, even if they sometimes work.

Object properties then have no index, they are all equal and not required to be run through in a determined order. If you want to count properties, you will have to set up the extra counter (as you did in your first example).

loop over an Array:

var a = [];
for (var i=0; i<a.length; i++) {
    i // is the index
    a[i] // is the item
}

loop over an Object:

var o = {};
for (var prop in o) {
    prop // is the property name
    o[prop] // is the property value - the item
}



回答6:


As others have said, you shouldn't be using for..in to iterate over an array.

for ( var i = 0, len = myArray.length; i < len; i++ ) { ... }

If you want cleaner syntax, you could use forEach:

myArray.forEach( function ( val, i ) { ... } );

If you want to use this method, make sure that you include the ES5 shim to add support for older browsers.




回答7:


Here's a function eachWithIndex that works with anything iterable.

You could also write a similar function eachWithKey that works with objets using for...in.

// example generator (returns an iterator that can only be iterated once)
function* eachFromTo(start, end) { for (let i = start; i <= end; i++) yield i }

// convers an iterable to an array (potential infinite loop)
function eachToArray(iterable) {
    const result = []
    for (const val of iterable) result.push(val)
    return result
}

// yields every value and index of an iterable (array, generator, ...)
function* eachWithIndex(iterable) {
    const shared = new Array(2)
    shared[1] = 0
    for (shared[0] of iterable) {
        yield shared
        shared[1]++
    }
}

console.log('iterate values and indexes from a generator')
for (const [val, i] of eachWithIndex(eachFromTo(10, 13))) console.log(val, i)

console.log('create an array')
const anArray = eachToArray(eachFromTo(10, 13))
console.log(anArray)

console.log('iterate values and indexes from an array')
for (const [val, i] of eachWithIndex(anArray)) console.log(val, i)

The good thing with generators is that they are lazy and can take another generator's result as an argument.




回答8:


That's my version of a composite iterator that yields an index and any passed generator function's value with an example of (slow) prime search:

const eachWithIndex = (iterable) => {
  return {
    *[Symbol.iterator]() {
      let i = 0
      for(let val of iteratable) {
        i++
          yield [i, val]
      }
    }
  }

}

const isPrime = (n) => {
  for (i = 2; i < Math.floor(Math.sqrt(n) + 1); i++) {
    if (n % i == 0) {
      return false
    }
  }
  return true
}

let primes = {
  *[Symbol.iterator]() {
    let candidate = 2
    while (true) {
      if (isPrime(candidate)) yield candidate
        candidate++
    }
  }
}

for (const [i, prime] of eachWithIndex(primes)) {
  console.log(i, prime)
  if (i === 100) break
}


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10179815/get-loop-counter-index-using-for-of-syntax-in-javascript

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!