3

If I have an array in Javascript that has been filled sporadically, how do I determine the number of non-nothing elements in the array?

for example:

var zipCodes = [];
zipCodes[10006] = 'New York, NY';
zipCodes[90210] = 'Los Angeles, CA';

zipCodes.length returns 90,211 here and I really don't want to loop through 90,209 nothings to find out I have two valid elements. Using a for-in loop means dealing with anything that might bubble up the prototype chain and trying to figure out if it's part of this array.

Is there any way, given the array defined above, I can extract "2" as the number of defined elements?

2 Answers 2

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You would need an object with key-value pairs (kind of like an associative array / hashtable) instead of an array:

var zipCodes = {};
zipCodes[10006] = 'New York, NY';
zipCodes[90210] = 'Los Angeles, CA';


for(var zipCode in zipCodes) {
    if(zipCodes.hasOwnProperty(zipCode)) {//makes sure prototypes aren't taken into account

    }
}

edit: or you can store objects in an array like this:

var zipCodes = [];
zipCodes.push({10006:'New York, NY'});
zipCodes.push({90210: 'Los Angeles, CA'});

//zipCodes.length = 2

6
  • I believe you have your object/array brackets reversed in your variable declarations. Feb 3, 2009 at 17:24
  • +1 for first approach, -1 second approach makes little sense. I wouldn't bother with the hasOwnProperty business, if you've got code thats fiddling with the base object prototype get rid of it pronto. Feb 3, 2009 at 17:43
  • @AnthonyWJones, You don't always have complete control of the code. Especially when you're using 3rd party libraries like MooTools or Prototype.js, so I just made a habit of this check. Besides, the OP specifically said the prototype chain would be a problem.
    – I.devries
    Feb 3, 2009 at 18:06
  • @Anthony: I agree with Vatos; always check hasOwnProperty() if you don't have controle over every script present; never assume that everyone else will play by your rules!
    – Christoph
    Feb 3, 2009 at 20:13
  • @Vatos: Anthony has a point regarding your second example - there's no easy way to retrieve the zip code! You should push something like {code: 10006, city: 'New York, NY'} instead...
    – Christoph
    Feb 3, 2009 at 20:18
0

You could also (depending on a large variety of current unknowns) populate a second array that holds indexes (indices?) of populated entries in the first array.

So you could have a method that zooms over the entire array once, populating the second array:

var indexesNext = 0;
var indexes = new Array();
for(i = 0 ; i < zipCodes.length ; i++) 
     if(zipCodes[i] != null) indexes[indexesNext++] = i;

Or you could use add and delete accessor methods on the zipCodes array to update the indexes array if you're expecting it to change often.

Or you could use the Javascript sort() method on the array, and iterate through it until you hit an empty cell. You could use this to optimise the previous techniques as well (YMMV on this built-in method's efficiency, but the new Javascript engines in FFX 3.1 and Chrome will certainly do quite well, I'm sure.)

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