1

I have two arrays like so;

arr1 = ["foo.com", "bar.com"],
arr2 = ["//test.net/index.html", "http://www.bar.com", "https://foo.com/example.js"]

I'm iterating through arr2 and I want to omit the ones that contain any value of arr1.

Currently I'm using indexOf but that doesn't work if the values don't match exactly.

$.each(arr2, function(k,v){
  if(arr1.indexOf(v) == -1)
    console.log(v);
});

I'd hope for the above code to output

//test.net/index.html

since it's the only value of arr2 that doesn't contain any value of arr1. What am I doing wrong?

1
  • test is backwards, all of the arr1 strings are shorter than arr2 strings so they will never contain them
    – charlietfl
    Oct 23, 2014 at 13:08

4 Answers 4

3

I would wrote two each loops for this:

arr1 = ["foo.com", "bar.com"],
arr2 = ["//test.net/index.html", "http://www.bar.com", "https://foo.com/example.js"]

$.each(arr2, function(x,y){
    var found = false;
    $.each(arr1, function(k,v){
        if(!(y.indexOf(v) == -1)){
        found = true;
        return false;
        }
    });
    
    if(!found){
        console.log(y);
    }
    
    found= false;
});  
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.9.0/jquery.min.js"></script>

2
  • Yes, you can do that. However it would be more optimal to use for loop and break to stop the search once occurrence is found. Or to return false from $.each to break the loop.
    – dfsq
    Oct 23, 2014 at 13:19
  • Yes thats true, i changed the code to return false after founding. Oct 23, 2014 at 13:25
3

You can use filter + some ES5 Array methods:

var arr1 = ["foo.com", "bar.com"],
    arr2 = ["//test.net/index.html", "http://www.bar.com", "https://foo.com/example.js"];

var result = arr2.filter(function(val) {
    return !arr1.some(function(el) {
        return val.indexOf(el) !== -1;
    });
});

alert(result);

Support for ES5 starts from IE9+, but if you need it to work in older IE, you can use polyfills (see links I provided), or it's pretty trivial to rewrite some part with simple for loop and use $.grep instead of Array.prototyp.filter.

2
  • filter is also an ES5 method. ;-)
    – RobG
    Oct 23, 2014 at 13:13
  • @RobG Yes, just like I said filter and some methods :)
    – dfsq
    Oct 23, 2014 at 13:15
0

It seems That you're using the Array version of indexOf, which doesn't work id the match is not exact. With a little bit more setup, you can use the String version of indexOf

function compareValues (arr1, arr2){

var res = false;
$.each(arr2, function(k,v) {
    checkAgainstArray(arr1, v);
});

function checkAgainstArray(arr1, value) {
    $.each(arr1, function(k, v) {
       if(value.indexOf(v) !== -1){
         res  = true;
       }
    });
}
  return res;
}

//later on

var isValueInArray = compareValues(arr1, arr2);

(the code is not tested), but I Hope this helps

-2

Try use the javascript RegExp to do the matching for each array element

http://www.w3schools.com/js/js_regexp.asp

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