73

Is there a better way than this to splice an array into another array in javascript

var string = 'theArray.splice('+start+', '+number+',"'+newItemsArray.join('","')+'");';
eval(string);
1
  • 1
    As a general rule of thumb, one should avoid eval at all costs in JavaScript. Using eval is always (without exception) more buggy, more error-prone, harder to debug, and much slower than the alternative. If you are tempted to use eval, then seek help or rewrite your code from scratch. eval is the bane of JavaScript. I have never once used eval. If I need to execute code, I use the much superior Function. In this case, your code might fail if startis a string, if number is a string, or if any of the strings in newItemsArray contain quotes or line-breaks or carriage-returns
    – Jack G
    Jan 19, 2021 at 2:11

8 Answers 8

142

You can use apply to avoid eval:

var args = [start, number].concat(newItemsArray);
Array.prototype.splice.apply(theArray, args);

The apply function is used to call another function, with a given context and arguments, provided as an array, for example:

If we call:

var nums = [1,2,3,4];
Math.min.apply(Math, nums);

The apply function will execute:

Math.min(1,2,3,4);
6
  • 4
    Although, it turns out I need to do Array.prototype.splice.apply(theArray, [start, number].concat(newItemsArray)) as all the arguments, not just some, must be in one array.
    – wheresrhys
    Aug 28, 2009 at 16:54
  • 3
    +1 for the [start, number].concat(array) pattern. that is nifty
    – Claudiu
    Oct 3, 2013 at 17:36
  • 1
    Has anyone tried to enter a large amount of element under Chrome? Around 130K elements we seem to get Stackoverflow exception. See: jsfiddle.net/DcHCY Jan 4, 2017 at 12:53
  • 2
    @Claudiu another nifty trick is to replace Array.prototype with []. So the command can be: [].splice.apply(theArray, [start, removeCount].concat(newItemsArray); Apr 9, 2017 at 10:10
  • Very late resposne to Gabriel Kohen, but using apply, or the ... operator both have problems with large data sets, you are gated by the argument limit of your specific javascript engine.
    – CSJordan
    Jun 25, 2019 at 16:42
77

UPDATE: ES6 version

If you're coding in ES6, you can use the "spread operator" (...).

array.splice(index, 0, ...arrayToInsert);

To learn more about the spread operator see the MDN documentation.


The 'old' ES5 way

If you wrap the top answer into a function you get this:

function insertArrayAt(array, index, arrayToInsert) {
    Array.prototype.splice.apply(array, [index, 0].concat(arrayToInsert));
}

You would use it like this:

var arr = ["A", "B", "C"];
insertArrayAt(arr, 1, ["x", "y", "z"]);
alert(JSON.stringify(arr)); // output: A, x, y, z, B, C

You can check it out in this jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/luisperezphd/Wc8aS/

2
  • interesting, didn't realize function arguments are coerced into an array and that spread syntax is valid
    – neaumusic
    Sep 4, 2018 at 15:17
  • Great catch on this array.splice(index, 0, ...arrayToInsert); seems the smoothest solution yet Jul 15, 2021 at 22:46
15

This question is really old, but with ES6, there's a simpler way to do this using the spread operator:

sourceArray.splice(index, 0, ...insertedArray)

If you're using uncompiled javascript in the browser, be sure to check if it's supported in your target browser at https://kangax.github.io/compat-table/es6/#test-spread_(...)_operator.


Also, this may be slightly off topic, but if you don't want or need to modify the original array, but could use a new array instead, consider this approach:

mergedArray = sourceArray.slice(0, index).concat(insertedArray, sourceArray.slice(index))
6

You can also add such a function to the Array prototype, if you want something that is almost identical to the splice method. E.g.

Array.prototype.spliceArray = function(index, n, array) {
    return Array.prototype.splice.apply(this, [index, n].concat(array));
}

Then usage would simply be:

var array = ["A","B","C","","E","F"];

array.splice(3,1,"D");
// array is ["A","B","C","D","E","F"]

array.spliceArray(3,3,["1","2","3"]);
// array is ["A","B","C","1","2","3"]

See it in action here: http://jsfiddle.net/TheMadDeveloper/knv2f8bb/1/

Some notes:

  • The splice function modifies the array directly, but returns the an array of elements that were removed... not the spliced array.
  • While it's normally not recommended to extend core javascript classes, this is relatively benign with most standard frameworks.
  • Extending Array won't work in cases where specialized array classes are used, such as an ImageData data Uint8ClampedArray.
1

The answers above that involve splice.apply and insert the array in a one liner will blow up the stack in a stack overflow for large array. See example here: http://jsfiddle.net/gkohen/u49ku99q/ You might have to slice and and push each item of the inserted and remaining part of the original array for it to work. See fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/gkohen/g9abppgy/26/

Array.prototype.spliceArray = function(index, insertedArray) {
   var postArray = this.splice(index);
   inPlacePush(this, insertedArray);
   inPlacePush(this, postArray);

   function inPlacePush(targetArray, pushedArray) {
// Not using forEach for browser compatability
       var pushedArrayLength = pushedArray.length;
       for (var index = 0; index < pushedArrayLength; index++) {
           targetArray.push(pushedArray[index]);
       }
   }
}
2
  • 1
    Do you know this problem occurs for splice.apply, or if it's browser specific?
    – Drenai
    Nov 25, 2018 at 8:36
  • 1
    @Drenai, this is a per browser limitation which you can easily hit with large arrays as mentioned here Dec 12, 2018 at 19:31
1

There are a lot of clever answers here, but the reason you use splice is so that it puts the elements into the current array without creating another. If you have to create an array to concat() against so you can use apply() then you're creating 2 additional trash arrays! Sorta defeats the whole purpose of writing esoteric Javascript. Besides if you don't care about that memory usage stuff (and you should) just dest = src1.concat(src2); it is infinitely more readable. So here's is my smallest number of lines while staying efficient answer.

for( let item of src ) dest.push( item );

Or if you'd like to polyfill it and have a little better browser support back:

src.forEach( function( x ) { dest.push(x); });

I'm sure the first is more performant (it's a word ;), but not supported in all browsers out there in the wild.

0

If you don't want to concatenate inserting items to first two parameters of Array.splice(), an elegant way is to use Function.bind() and Function.apply() together.

theArray.splice.bind(null, startIndex, deleteCount).apply(newItemsArray);
-1

I wanted to have a function which would take only part of the source array so I have mine slightly different based off CMS's answer

function spliceArray(array, index, howmany, source, start, end) {
    var arguments;
  if( source !== undefined ){
    arguments = source.slice(start, end);
    arguments.splice(0,0, index, howmany);
  } else{
   arguments = [index, howmany];
  }
    return Array.prototype.splice.apply(array, arguments)
}

Array.prototype.spliceArray = function(index, howmany, source, start, end) {
    return spliceArray(this, index, howmany, source, start, end);
}

You can see it at: https://jsfiddle.net/matthewvukomanovic/nx858uz5/

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