Array.forEach
cannot be broken and using try...catch
or hacky methods such as Array.every
or Array.some
will only make your code harder to understand. There are only two solutions of this problem:
1) use a old for
loop: this will be the most compatible solution but can be very hard to read when used often in large blocks of code:
var testArray = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
for (var key = 0; key < testArray.length; key++) {
var value = testArray[key];
console.log(key); // This is the key;
console.log(value); // This is the value;
}
2) use the new ECMA6 (2015 specification) in cases where compatibility is not a problem. Note that even in 2016, only a few browsers and IDEs offer good support for this new specification. While this works for iterable objects (e.g. Arrays), if you want to use this on non-iterable objects, you will need to use the Object.entries
method. This method is scarcely available as of June 18th 2016 and even Chrome requires a special flag to enable it: chrome://flags/#enable-javascript-harmony
. For Arrays, you won't need all this but compatibility remains a problem:
var testArray = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
for (let [key, value] of testArray.entries()) {
console.log(key); // This is the key;
console.log(value); // This is the value;
}
3) A lot of people would agree that neither the first or second option are good candidates. Until option 2 becomes the new standard, most popular libraries such as AngularJS and jQuery offer their own loop methods which can be superior to anything available in JavaScript. Also for those who are not already using these big libraries and that are looking for lightweight options, solutions like this can be used and will almost be on par with ECMA6 while keeping compatibility with older browsers.