There are many questions about this, not least: jQuery version of array contains, a solution with the splice method and many more. However, they all seem complicated and annoying.

With the combined powers of javascript, jQuery and coffeescript, what is the very cleanest way to remove an element from a javascript array? We don't know the index in advance. In code:

a = [4,8,2,3]
a.remove(8)     # a is now [4,2,3]

Failing a good built-in method, what is a clean way of extending javascript arrays to support such a method? If it helps, I'm really using arrays as sets. Solutions will ideally work nicely in coffeescript with jQuery support. Also, I couldn't care less about speed, but instead prioritize clear, simple code.

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6 Answers

up vote 43 down vote accepted

CoffeeScript:

Array::remove = (e) -> @[t..t] = [] if (t = @indexOf(e)) > -1

Which simply splices out the element at position t, the index where e was found (if it was actually found t > -1). Coffeescript translates this to:

Array.prototype.remove = function(e) {
    var t, _ref;
    if ((t = this.indexOf(e)) > -1) {
        return ([].splice.apply(this, [t, t - t + 1].concat(_ref = [])), _ref);
    }
};

And if you want to remove all matching elements, and return a new array, using CoffeeScript and jQuery:

Array::remove = (v) -> $.grep @,(e)->e!=v

which translates into:

Array.prototype.remove = function(v) {
    return $.grep(this, function(e) {
        return e !== v;
    });
};

Or doing the same without jQuery's grep:

Array::filterOutValue = (v) -> x for x in @ when x!=v

which translates to:

Array.prototype.filterOutValue = function(v) {
    var x, _i, _len, _results;
    _results = [];
    for (_i = 0, _len = this.length; _i < _len; _i++) {
        x = this[_i];
        if (x !== v) {
            _results.push(x);
        }
    }
    return _results;
};
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Clearly you have been using CoffeeScript for much longer than I; +1 for what looks to be very idiomatic. – Domenic Jan 28 '11 at 14:31
Thanks @Amir for a great, idiomatic answer. The other answers are helpful, too; I like this one because it uses the available tools to make things simpler. One minor change: I'll probably call it Array::removing, as in smaller_array = larger_array.removing(something), so it's clear that it returns a new array. – Peter Jan 28 '11 at 20:00
You mean for the second one? I would personally call it filterOutValue, but to each his own. Naming variables and functions is the hardest part of programming :) – Amir Jan 28 '11 at 23:22
2  
God damn coffeescript is beautiful. I believe you can get rid of the @.indexOf and just do @indexOf (no dot). – George R Aug 24 '11 at 2:24
Get rid of the unnecessary concat: Array::remove = (v) -> @splice i, 1 if i = @indexOf(v) > -1 – Ricardo Tomasi Nov 13 '11 at 7:46
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Using vanilla Javascript:

Array.prototype.remove = function(elem) {
    var match = -1;

    while( (match = this.indexOf(elem)) > -1 ) {
        this.splice(match, 1);
    }
};

var a = [4, 8, 2, 3];

a.remove(8);

Only jQuery:

jQuery.removeFromArray = function(value, arr) {
    return jQuery.grep(arr, function(elem, index) {
        return elem !== value;
    });
};

var a = [4, 8, 2, 3];

a = jQuery.removeFromArray(8, a);
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Although I of course should benchmark, I would suspect this would be slower due to indexOf being O(n), giving you total complexity O(n * m + n) for m the number of matches. My answer makes a single pass, giving O(n) complexity. – Domenic Jan 28 '11 at 8:04
@Domenic: of course. .index() is not as fast, but it's fair enough and less code. If I was after performance, I'd using a while() loop anyway: see jsperf.com/benchmark-for-domenic – jAndy Jan 28 '11 at 8:30
Haha, your jsPerf has uncovered a difference between Chrome and Firefox 4b10, nice! The for version ran much faster in my Firefox than it apparently did in your Chrome. Cool! – Domenic Jan 28 '11 at 14:36
@Domenic: indeed pretty wierd. – jAndy Jan 28 '11 at 14:51
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This seems pretty clean and understandable; unlike other answers, it takes into account the possibility of an element showing up more than once.

Array.prototype.remove = function (value) {
    for (var i = 0; i < this.length; ) {
        if (this[i] === value) {
            this.splice(i, 1);
        } else {
           ++i;
        }
    }
}

In CoffeeScript:

Array::remove = (value) ->
    i = 0
    while i < @length
        if @[i] == value
            @splice i, 1
        else
            ++i
    return @
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This is just a slight change to Amir's awesome solution:

Array::remove = (e) -> @splice(t,1)[0] if (t = @indexOf(e)) > -1

which returns the element iff the list has it, so you can do something like:

do_something 100 if a.remove(100)

The remove coffee script translates to this javascript:

Array.prototype.remove = function(e) {
  var t, _ref;
  if ((t = this.indexOf(e)) > -1) {
    return ([].splice.apply(this, [t, t - t + 1].concat(_ref = [])), _ref);
  }};
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if you are also using CoffeeScript creator's underscore.js library, here's a one-liner that will work nicely:

a = _(a).reject (v)-> v is e

or in js:

a = _(a).reject(function(v) { return v == e; });
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This is really easy with jQuery:

var index = $.inArray("value", myArray);
if(index != -1)
{
  myArray.splice(index, 1);
}

Notes:

splice returns the elements that were removed, so don't do myArray = myArray.splice(). myArray.splice(index,1) means "remove the array element at index 'index' from the array".

$.inArray returns the index in the array of the value you're looking for, or -1 if the value isn't in the array.

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