2342

I'm looking for any alternatives to the below for creating a JavaScript array containing 1 through to N where N is only known at runtime.

var foo = [];

for (var i = 1; i <= N; i++) {
   foo.push(i);
}

To me it feels like there should be a way of doing this without the loop.

7
  • 408
    After reading this entire page, I have come to the conclusion that your own simple for-loop is the simplest, most readable, and least error-prone.
    – Kokodoko
    May 8, 2014 at 16:09
  • If anyone needs something more advanced, I created a node.js lib that does this for numbers, letters, negative/positive ranges, etc. github.com/jonschlinkert/fill-range. It's used in github.com/jonschlinkert/braces for brace expansion and github.com/jonschlinkert/micromatch for glob patterns Jun 9, 2015 at 5:21
  • Another way of doing it can be like this : Array.from({length : 10}, (_, v) => v) Aug 25, 2019 at 0:15
  • @SahilGupta Almost. If we want 1 to 10, we need to add 1, e.g. this: Array.from({length : 10}, (_, v) => v+1) Oct 13, 2019 at 21:54
  • Instead of an array, define foo as object {} then add your own indexes with foo[i] = i;
    – SPlatten
    Feb 27, 2020 at 13:42

79 Answers 79

3775

In ES6 using Array from() and keys() methods.

Array.from(Array(10).keys())
//=> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

Shorter version using spread operator.

[...Array(10).keys()]
//=> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

Start from 1 by passing map function to Array from(), with an object with a length property:

Array.from({length: 10}, (_, i) => i + 1)
//=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
11
  • 135
    Just a note, this will always start at 0. Will need to chain a map to the array to adjust the values ([...Array(10).keys()].map(x => x++);) to start at 1 Dec 29, 2015 at 21:42
  • 80
    Just change map(x => x++) to map(x => ++x) due to precedence increment happens after the value return :)
    – Brock
    Feb 12, 2016 at 9:39
  • 195
    Er what!? Why map when you can simply slice? [...Array(N+1).keys()].slice(1)
    – Robin
    Apr 24, 2016 at 19:51
  • 36
    Or don't use keys and only 1 map -> Array.from(Array(10)).map((e,i)=>i+1)
    – yonatanmn
    Jun 29, 2016 at 14:03
  • 130
    Or don't use keys and map and just pass a mapping function to from Array.from(Array(10), (e,i)=>i+1) Feb 21, 2017 at 13:10
897

You can do so:

var N = 10; 
Array.apply(null, {length: N}).map(Number.call, Number)

result: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

or with random values:

Array.apply(null, {length: N}).map(Function.call, Math.random)

result: [0.7082694901619107, 0.9572225909214467, 0.8586748542729765, 0.8653848143294454, 0.008339877473190427, 0.9911756622605026, 0.8133423360995948, 0.8377588465809822, 0.5577575915958732, 0.16363654541783035]

Explanation

First, note that Number.call(undefined, N) is equivalent to Number(N), which just returns N. We'll use that fact later.

Array.apply(null, [undefined, undefined, undefined]) is equivalent to Array(undefined, undefined, undefined), which produces a three-element array and assigns undefined to each element.

How can you generalize that to N elements? Consider how Array() works, which goes something like this:

function Array() {
    if ( arguments.length == 1 &&
         'number' === typeof arguments[0] &&
         arguments[0] >= 0 && arguments &&
         arguments[0] < 1 << 32 ) {
        return [ … ];  // array of length arguments[0], generated by native code
    }
    var a = [];
    for (var i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++) {
        a.push(arguments[i]);
    }
    return a;
}

Since ECMAScript 5, Function.prototype.apply(thisArg, argsArray) also accepts a duck-typed array-like object as its second parameter. If we invoke Array.apply(null, { length: N }), then it will execute

function Array() {
    var a = [];
    for (var i = 0; i < /* arguments.length = */ N; i++) {
        a.push(/* arguments[i] = */ undefined);
    }
    return a;
}

Now we have an N-element array, with each element set to undefined. When we call .map(callback, thisArg) on it, each element will be set to the result of callback.call(thisArg, element, index, array). Therefore, [undefined, undefined, …, undefined].map(Number.call, Number) would map each element to (Number.call).call(Number, undefined, index, array), which is the same as Number.call(undefined, index, array), which, as we observed earlier, evaluates to index. That completes the array whose elements are the same as their index.

Why go through the trouble of Array.apply(null, {length: N}) instead of just Array(N)? After all, both expressions would result an an N-element array of undefined elements. The difference is that in the former expression, each element is explicitly set to undefined, whereas in the latter, each element was never set. According to the documentation of .map():

callback is invoked only for indexes of the array which have assigned values; it is not invoked for indexes which have been deleted or which have never been assigned values.

Therefore, Array(N) is insufficient; Array(N).map(Number.call, Number) would result in an uninitialized array of length N.

Compatibility

Since this technique relies on behaviour of Function.prototype.apply() specified in ECMAScript 5, it will not work in pre-ECMAScript 5 browsers such as Chrome 14 and Internet Explorer 9.

13
  • 73
    +1 for cleverness but please note this is orders of magnitude SLOWER than a primitive for loop: jsperf.com/array-magic-vs-for
    – warpech
    Jan 24, 2014 at 13:59
  • 9
    Very clever -- probably too so. Exploiting the fact that Function.prototype.call's first param is the this object to map directly over Array.prototype.map's iterator parameter has a certain brilliance to it. Aug 17, 2014 at 22:46
  • 18
    This is really, really clever (borders on abusing JS). The really important insight here is the idiosyncrasy of map on unassigned values, in my opinion. Another version (and possibly slightly clearer, albeit longer) is: Array.apply(null, { length: N }).map(function(element, index) { return index; })
    – Ben Reich
    Oct 22, 2014 at 14:23
  • 7
    @BenReich Even better (in terms of JS abuse levels): Array.apply(null, new Array(N)).map(function(_,i) { return i; }) or, in case of es6 and arrow functions, even shorter: Array.apply(null, new Array(N)).map((_,i) => i)
    – oddy
    Nov 25, 2014 at 0:07
  • 2
    IF this returns an array that starts at 1, it would actually answer the OP's question May 17, 2017 at 3:59
768

Multiple ways using ES6

Using spread operator (...) and keys method

[ ...Array(N).keys() ].map( i => i+1);

Fill/Map

Array(N).fill().map((_, i) => i+1);

Array.from

Array.from(Array(N), (_, i) => i+1)

Array.from and { length: N } hack

Array.from({ length: N }, (_, i) => i+1)

Note about generalised form

All the forms above can produce arrays initialised to pretty much any desired values by changing i+1 to expression required (e.g. i*2, -i, 1+i*2, i%2 and etc). If expression can be expressed by some function f then the first form becomes simply

[ ...Array(N).keys() ].map(f)

Examples:

Array.from({length: 5}, (v, k) => k+1); 
// [1,2,3,4,5]

Since the array is initialized with undefined on each position, the value of v will be undefined

Example showcasing all the forms

let demo= (N) => {
  console.log(
    [ ...Array(N).keys() ].map(( i) => i+1),
    Array(N).fill().map((_, i) => i+1) ,
    Array.from(Array(N), (_, i) => i+1),
    Array.from({ length: N }, (_, i) => i+1)
  )
}

demo(5)

More generic example with custom initialiser function f i.e.

[ ...Array(N).keys() ].map((i) => f(i))

or even simpler

[ ...Array(N).keys() ].map(f)

let demo= (N,f) => {
  console.log(
    [ ...Array(N).keys() ].map(f),
    Array(N).fill().map((_, i) => f(i)) ,
    Array.from(Array(N), (_, i) => f(i)),
    Array.from({ length: N }, (_, i) => f(i))
  )
}

demo(5, i=>2*i+1)

10
  • 6
    Use k++ for arrays starting at 0
    – Borgboy
    Mar 15, 2017 at 1:55
  • 8
    If you want to increment, don't use k++, use ++k.
    – Alex
    Feb 13, 2018 at 18:42
  • 5
    Beware Array.from is not supported in IE, unless you're poly-filling it.
    – Lauren
    May 4, 2018 at 21:30
  • 3
    To make the TS compiler happy consider replacing the unused param with lodash: Array.from({ length: 5 }, (_, k) => k + 1); Jan 29, 2019 at 12:22
  • 1
    @bluejayke I believe this answer has been edited since I commented, but I was talking specifically about Array.from({length: 5}, (v, k) => k+1);, which does indeed only iterate once.
    – willurd
    Jun 16, 2020 at 3:57
558

If I get what you are after, you want an array of numbers 1..n that you can later loop through.

If this is all you need, can you do this instead?

var foo = new Array(45); // create an empty array with length 45

then when you want to use it... (un-optimized, just for example)

for(var i = 0; i < foo.length; i++){
  document.write('Item: ' + (i + 1) + ' of ' + foo.length + '<br/>'); 
}

e.g. if you don't need to store anything in the array, you just need a container of the right length that you can iterate over... this might be easier.

See it in action here: http://jsfiddle.net/3kcvm/

16
  • 7
    impressed you managed to phrase my question better than I could, you are indeed correct as on reflection all I need is an array of numbers that I can later loop through :) Thanks for your answer.
    – Godders
    Sep 19, 2010 at 18:08
  • 195
    @Godders: If this is what you're looking for, why do you need an array? A simple var n = 45; and then looping from 1..n would do.
    – casablanca
    Sep 19, 2010 at 18:33
  • 4
    @Godders - To note, if you want to decrease the size of the array after it is created to length M, simply use foo.length = M --- The cut off info is lost. See it in action ==> jsfiddle.net/ACMXp Sep 20, 2010 at 2:11
  • 35
    I really dont get why this answer even have upvotes... especially when the OP himself agrees it doesn't make any sense in a few comments above since he could just have done var n = 45;.
    – plalx
    Nov 4, 2013 at 14:39
  • 112
    @scunliffe: Please note, that new Array(45); does not "create a 45 element array" (in same meaning as [undefined,undefined,..undefined] does). It rather "creates empty array with length = 45" ([undefined x 45]), same as var foo = []; foo.length=45;. That's why forEach, and map will not apply in this case.
    – tomalec
    Jan 24, 2014 at 14:00
470

Arrays innately manage their lengths. As they are traversed, their indexes can be held in memory and referenced at that point. If a random index needs to be known, the indexOf method can be used.


This said, for your needs you may just want to declare an array of a certain size:

var foo = new Array(N);   // where N is a positive integer

/* this will create an array of size, N, primarily for memory allocation, 
   but does not create any defined values

   foo.length                                // size of Array
   foo[ Math.floor(foo.length/2) ] = 'value' // places value in the middle of the array
*/


ES6

Spread

Making use of the spread operator (...) and keys method, enables you to create a temporary array of size N to produce the indexes, and then a new array that can be assigned to your variable:

var foo = [ ...Array(N).keys() ];

Fill/Map

You can first create the size of the array you need, fill it with undefined and then create a new array using map, which sets each element to the index.

var foo = Array(N).fill().map((v,i)=>i);

Array.from

This should be initializing to length of size N and populating the array in one pass.

Array.from({ length: N }, (v, i) => i)



In lieu of the comments and confusion, if you really wanted to capture the values from 1..N in the above examples, there are a couple options:

  1. if the index is available, you can simply increment it by one (e.g., ++i).
  2. in cases where index is not used -- and possibly a more efficient way -- is to create your array but make N represent N+1, then shift off the front.

    So if you desire 100 numbers:

    let arr; (arr=[ ...Array(101).keys() ]).shift()
    




14
  • I believe this is useful when the array of numbers is being used for data that cannot be processed at the receiving end. (Like an HTML template that is just replacing values.) Aug 22, 2012 at 15:01
  • 6
    Like I said, I need to populate a dropdown with the numbers 1 through 10. That's all. There IS a usecase, MY usecase. That's how I found this page. So just building an array by hand was less complicated than anything I saw here. So my requirements aren't the requirements of the OP. But I have my answer.
    – CigarDoug
    Oct 24, 2018 at 11:24
  • 1
    @vol7ron There is a usecase, I also have one. In angular, in paging, I want to show the pages in the footer that are clickable. So I loop the elements in a view with *ngFor="let p of pagesCounter". You have a better solution for that? BTW, check out stackoverflow.com/questions/36354325/…
    – Dalibor
    Mar 30, 2019 at 8:47
  • 1
    This is wrong. All examples produce array of form [0,..,n-1] whereas question is for [1,...,n]
    – husayt
    Feb 27, 2020 at 13:18
  • 1
    @husayt yes, you’re right; however, that’s the point of the answer (as with the selected answer) to store the number from 0..N and display from 1..N+1, by adding 1 in the presentation
    – vol7ron
    Feb 27, 2020 at 13:45
217

In ES6 you can do:

Array(N).fill().map((e,i)=>i+1);

http://jsbin.com/molabiluwa/edit?js,console

Edit: Changed Array(45) to Array(N) since you've updated the question.

console.log(
  Array(45).fill(0).map((e,i)=>i+1)
);

11
  • 4
    +1 because it's a whole big O better than the nasty .join.splitversion - but I still think the humble loop is better.
    – Robin
    Apr 24, 2016 at 19:33
  • 4
    const gen = N => [...(function*(){let i=0;while(i<N)yield i++})()]
    – Robin
    Apr 24, 2016 at 21:26
  • 1
    you don't need to add an arg to .fill()
    – Jason
    Sep 30, 2016 at 18:19
  • 9
    I don't understand why .fill() is necessary. I see that it is when I test on node's repl, but since Array(1)[0] === undefined, what difference does the call to fill() in Array(1).fill(undefined) make?
    – Dominic
    Oct 14, 2016 at 9:45
  • 13
    For anyone else who is interested, the difference between Array(N) and Array(N).fill() is explained well here
    – Dominic
    Oct 17, 2016 at 8:59
126

Use the very popular Underscore _.range method

// _.range([start], stop, [step])

_.range(10); // => [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
_.range(1, 11); // => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
_.range(0, 30, 5); // => [0, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25]
_.range(0, -10, -1); //  => [0, -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, -7, -8, -9]
_.range(0); // => []
3
83
function range(start, end) {
    var foo = [];
    for (var i = start; i <= end; i++) {
        foo.push(i);
    }
    return foo;
}

Then called by

var foo = range(1, 5);

There is no built-in way to do this in Javascript, but it's a perfectly valid utility function to create if you need to do it more than once.

Edit: In my opinion, the following is a better range function. Maybe just because I'm biased by LINQ, but I think it's more useful in more cases. Your mileage may vary.

function range(start, count) {
    if(arguments.length == 1) {
        count = start;
        start = 0;
    }

    var foo = [];
    for (var i = 0; i < count; i++) {
        foo.push(start + i);
    }
    return foo;
}
7
  • 2
    I like this. If you wanted to go the extra mile with it, you could declare it as Array.prototype.range = function(start, end) { ... };. Then, you can call range(x, y) on any Array object. Sep 19, 2010 at 17:44
  • 9
    Rather make it a method of Array instead of Array.prototype as there is no reason (it might even be considered rather dumb) to have this method on every array.
    – ase
    Sep 19, 2010 at 17:47
  • 9
    Array.range(1, 5) would probably be more appropriate, but there is something kind of cool about writing [].range(1, 5).
    – MooGoo
    Sep 19, 2010 at 17:54
  • "Rather make it a method of Array instead of Array.prototype" - What's the difference? You mean on a specific array only?
    – pilau
    Apr 11, 2013 at 13:32
  • 4
    @pilau Just as adamse says, it looks weird. If it's on the prototype, you can say foo = [1, 2, 3]; bar = foo.range(0, 10);. But that's just...confusing. bar = Array.range(0, 10) is a lot more clear and explicit. The range has nothing to do with the instance, so there's no reason to make it an instance method.
    – Ian Henry
    Apr 11, 2013 at 14:19
77

Simply, this worked for me:

[...Array(5)].map(...)
7
  • 11
    [...Array(5)].map((x,i)=>i)
    – jimm101
    Apr 3, 2023 at 1:13
  • 2
    Elegant and simple.
    – Or Assayag
    Apr 20, 2023 at 5:15
  • 1
    @jimm101 I'm very curious why [...Array(5)].map((a)=>7) gives an array of sevens while Array(5).map((a)=>7) doesn't. The slitting of the array using ... is still producing an array of undefined values so why would it make difference? Oct 6, 2023 at 19:01
  • @KonradViltersten The deconstruction produces an array of undefined, the other an array of empty values. Undefined means the element has been created, but no value is assigned, so the index i still works.
    – jimm101
    Oct 8, 2023 at 14:13
  • @jimm101 Thanks for the reply. What I get confused by is that I don't rely on the index i here, just the item a (be it empty, null or whatever else). Are you saying that we actually don't iterate the array for empty values? Because if we so, then I'd somehow expect 7 to be placed in each spot when an empty value resides. Help me understand. Oct 8, 2023 at 14:41
74

Performance

Today 2020.12.11 I performed tests on macOS HighSierra 10.13.6 on Chrome v87, Safari v13.1.2 and Firefox v83 for chosen solutions.

Results

For all browsers

  • solution O (based on while) is the fastest (except Firefox for big N - but it's fast there)
  • solution T is fastest on Firefox for big N
  • solutions M,P is fast for small N
  • solution V (lodash) is fast for big N
  • solution W,X are slow for small N
  • solution F is slow

enter image description here

Details

I perform 2 tests cases:

  • for small N = 10 - you can run it HERE
  • for big N = 1000000 - you can run it HERE

Below snippet presents all tested solutions A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X

function A(N) {
  return Array.from({length: N}, (_, i) => i + 1)
}

function B(N) {
  return Array(N).fill().map((_, i) => i+1);
}

function C(N) {
  return Array(N).join().split(',').map((_, i) => i+1 );
}

function D(N) {
  return Array.from(Array(N), (_, i) => i+1)
}

function E(N) {
  return Array.from({ length: N }, (_, i) => i+1)
}

function F(N) {
  return Array.from({length:N}, Number.call, i => i + 1)
}

function G(N) {
  return (Array(N)+'').split(',').map((_,i)=> i+1)
}

function H(N) {
  return [ ...Array(N).keys() ].map( i => i+1);
}

function I(N) {
  return [...Array(N).keys()].map(x => x + 1);
}

function J(N) {
  return [...Array(N+1).keys()].slice(1)
}

function K(N) {
  return [...Array(N).keys()].map(x => ++x);
}

function L(N) {
  let arr; (arr=[ ...Array(N+1).keys() ]).shift();
  return arr;
}

function M(N) {
  var arr = [];
  var i = 0;

  while (N--) arr.push(++i);

  return arr; 
}

function N(N) {
  var a=[],b=N;while(b--)a[b]=b+1;
  return a;
}

function O(N) {
  var a=Array(N),b=0;
  while(b<N) a[b++]=b;
  return a;
}

function P(N) {
  var foo = [];
  for (var i = 1; i <= N; i++) foo.push(i);
  return foo;
}

function Q(N) {
  for(var a=[],b=N;b--;a[b]=b+1);
  return a;
}

function R(N) {
  for(var i,a=[i=0];i<N;a[i++]=i);
  return a;
}

function S(N) {
    let foo,x;
    for(foo=[x=N]; x; foo[x-1]=x--);
  return foo;
}

function T(N) {
  return new Uint8Array(N).map((item, i) => i + 1);
}

function U(N) {
  return '_'.repeat(5).split('').map((_, i) => i + 1);
}

function V(N) {
  return _.range(1, N+1);
}

function W(N) {
  return [...(function*(){let i=0;while(i<N)yield ++i})()]
}

function X(N) {
  function sequence(max, step = 1) {
    return {
      [Symbol.iterator]: function* () {
        for (let i = 1; i <= max; i += step) yield i
      }
    }
  }

  return [...sequence(N)];
}


[A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,I,J,K,L,M,N,O,P,Q,R,S,T,U,V,W,X].forEach(f=> {
  console.log(`${f.name} ${f(5)}`);
})
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/lodash.js/4.17.20/lodash.min.js" integrity="sha512-90vH1Z83AJY9DmlWa8WkjkV79yfS2n2Oxhsi2dZbIv0nC4E6m5AbH8Nh156kkM7JePmqD6tcZsfad1ueoaovww==" crossorigin="anonymous"> </script>
  
This snippet only presents functions used in performance tests - it does not perform tests itself!

And here are example results for chrome

enter image description here

1
  • For those concerned with performance: the time it takes to create the array is only half of the story. You should also be concerned with the performance of using the array afterwards, which can be different depending on how the array is constructed, because engines have different internal representations for dense arrays and sparse arrays (aka arrays with "holes"), and a sparse array will retain the "sparse array" representation even if it becomes dense after construction. If in doubt, benchmark in a real use case.
    – kaya3
    Aug 14, 2022 at 12:52
64

the fastest way to fill an Array in v8 is:

[...Array(5)].map((_,i) => i);

result will be: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]

3
  • is there a way to do it without the extra variable _ Mar 26, 2019 at 23:16
  • @bluejayke no :(
    – аlex
    Mar 27, 2019 at 10:50
  • harsh, do you know what the source code of .map is? I'm not sure if its any faster than a for loop, but if not then theoretically we can just defineProperty and make a new one Mar 27, 2019 at 10:54
55

This question has a lot of complicated answers, but a simple one-liner:

[...Array(255).keys()].map(x => x + 1)

Also, although the above is short (and neat) to write, I think the following is a bit faster (for a max length of:

127, Int8,

255, Uint8,

32,767, Int16,

65,535, Uint16,

2,147,483,647, Int32,

4,294,967,295, Uint32.

(based on the max integer values), also here's more on Typed Arrays):

(new Uint8Array(255)).map(($,i) => i + 1);

Although this solution is also not so ideal, because it creates two arrays, and uses the extra variable declaration "$" (not sure any way to get around that using this method). I think the following solution is the absolute fastest possible way to do this:

for(var i = 0, arr = new Uint8Array(255); i < arr.length; i++) arr[i] = i + 1;

Anytime after this statement is made, you can simple use the variable "arr" in the current scope;

If you want to make a simple function out of it (with some basic verification):

function range(min, max) {
    min = min && min.constructor == Number ? min : 0;
    !(max && max.constructor == Number && max > min) && // boolean statements can also be used with void return types, like a one-line if statement.
        ((max = min) & (min = 0));  //if there is a "max" argument specified, then first check if its a number and if its graeter than min: if so, stay the same; if not, then consider it as if there is no "max" in the first place, and "max" becomes "min" (and min becomes 0 by default)

    for(var i = 0, arr = new (
        max < 128 ? Int8Array : 
        max < 256 ? Uint8Array :
        max < 32768 ? Int16Array : 
        max < 65536 ? Uint16Array :
        max < 2147483648 ? Int32Array :
        max < 4294967296 ? Uint32Array : 
        Array
    )(max - min); i < arr.length; i++) arr[i] = i + min;
    return arr;
}



//and you can loop through it easily using array methods if you want
range(1,11).forEach(x => console.log(x));

//or if you're used to pythons `for...in` you can do a similar thing with `for...of` if you want the individual values:
for(i of range(2020,2025)) console.log(i);

//or if you really want to use `for..in`, you can, but then you will only be accessing the keys:

for(k in range(25,30)) console.log(k);

console.log(
    range(1,128).constructor.name,
    range(200).constructor.name,
    range(400,900).constructor.name,
    range(33333).constructor.name,
    range(823, 100000).constructor.name,
    range(10,4) // when the "min" argument is greater than the "max", then it just considers it as if there is no "max", and the new max becomes "min", and "min" becomes 0, as if "max" was never even written
);


so, with the above function, the above super-slow "simple one-liner" becomes the super-fast, even-shorter:

range(1,14000);
5
48

Using ES2015/ES6 spread operator

[...Array(10)].map((_, i) => i + 1)

console.log([...Array(10)].map((_, i) => i + 1))

1
  • Finally what I was looking for, I'd also specify that the 1, is the starting point tho
    – 8koi
    Sep 6, 2022 at 23:50
44

You can use this:

new Array(/*any number which you want*/)
    .join().split(',')
    .map(function(item, index){ return ++index;})

for example

new Array(10)
    .join().split(',')
    .map(function(item, index){ return ++index;})

will create following array:

[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
3
  • Also, why not new Array(10).join().split(',').map(function() {return ++arguments[1]});?
    – user2039981
    Jan 3, 2016 at 20:31
  • 1
    @Murplyx for some cases function with arguments inside will be not optimized by JS engine (true even for V8, see jsperf.com/arguments-vs-array-argument/2)
    – nktssh
    Jan 5, 2016 at 21:25
  • 4
    This is an interesting solution but it's entirely impractical - having to parse the array 3 times (once to join, once to split, and once for the thing you actually want to do) is just not nice - I know they seem to have fallen out of favor for some reason, but it would be far better to simply use a good old fashioned loop!
    – Robin
    Apr 24, 2016 at 19:29
43

Solution for empty array and with just number in array

const arrayOne = new Array(10);
console.log(arrayOne);

const arrayTwo = [...Array(10).keys()];
console.log(arrayTwo);

var arrayThree = Array.from(Array(10).keys());
console.log(arrayThree);

const arrayStartWithOne = Array.from(Array(10).keys(), item => item + 1);
console.log(arrayStartWithOne)

0
42

If you happen to be using d3.js in your app as I am, D3 provides a helper function that does this for you.

So to get an array from 0 to 4, it's as easy as:

d3.range(5)
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]

and to get an array from 1 to 5, as you were requesting:

d3.range(1, 5+1)
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Check out this tutorial for more info.

1
  • This comment gave me the idea to look up the range() function in RamdaJS, which happens to be the JS library I'm working with on my current project. Perfect.
    – morphatic
    Dec 24, 2015 at 5:34
40

This is probably the fastest way to generate an array of numbers

Shortest

var a=[],b=N;while(b--)a[b]=b+1;

Inline

var arr=(function(a,b){while(a--)b[a]=a;return b})(10,[]);
//arr=[0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

If you want to start from 1

var arr=(function(a,b){while(a--)b[a]=a+1;return b})(10,[]);
//arr=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

Want a function?

function range(a,b,c){c=[];while(a--)c[a]=a+b;return c}; //length,start,placeholder
var arr=range(10,5);
//arr=[5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]

WHY?

  1. while is the fastest loop

  2. Direct setting is faster than push

  3. [] is faster than new Array(10)

  4. it's short... look the first code. then look at all other functions in here.

If you like can't live without for

for(var a=[],b=7;b>0;a[--b]=b+1); //a=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

or

for(var a=[],b=7;b--;a[b]=b+1); //a=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7]
17
  • 8
    It would be better to back up these claims with benchmarks. Try jsperf.com.
    – Matt Ball
    Aug 21, 2013 at 13:58
  • 3
    lol jsperf... pls Matt just beacuse you don't like my answer stop downvoting my others ... stackoverflow.com/a/18344296/2450730 ... use console.time() or how it's called ... NOT jsperf.
    – cocco
    Aug 21, 2013 at 14:00
  • 4
    FYI: As John Reisig first published a few years ago - on some platforms (meaning windows:P) time is being fed to the browser once every 16ms. Also there are other problems with measuring time of execution in multitasking environments. jsperf.com has implemented running the tests so that they are statistically correct. It's ok to run console.time() to get an intuition, but for a proof, you need jsperf.com AND it shows you cross-browser results from other people (different hardware etc)
    – naugtur
    Sep 14, 2013 at 8:58
  • 3
    @cocco this is incorrect: var a=[],b=N;while(b--){a[b]=a+1};
    – vintagexav
    May 15, 2015 at 23:28
  • 6
    @cocco— while isn't always faster than other loops. In some browsers, a decrementing while loop is much slower than a for loop, you can't make general statements about javascript performance like that because there are so many implementations with so many different optimisations. However, in general I like your approach. ;-)
    – RobG
    Aug 9, 2015 at 23:57
39

If you are using lodash, you can use _.range:

_.range([start=0], end, [step=1])

Creates an array of numbers (positive and/or negative) progressing from start up to, but not including, end. A step of -1 is used if a negative start is specified without an end or step. If end is not specified, it's set to start with start then set to 0.

Examples:

_.range(4);
// ➜ [0, 1, 2, 3]

_.range(-4);
// ➜ [0, -1, -2, -3]

_.range(1, 5);
// ➜ [1, 2, 3, 4]

_.range(0, 20, 5);
// ➜ [0, 5, 10, 15]

_.range(0, -4, -1);
// ➜ [0, -1, -2, -3]

_.range(1, 4, 0);
// ➜ [1, 1, 1]

_.range(0);
// ➜ []
1
36

the new way to filling Array is:

const array = [...Array(5).keys()]
console.log(array)

result will be: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]

2
  • 1
    This s a really good answer, although tecnically the question was from 1-N, not 0-(N-1) Mar 10, 2019 at 3:41
  • Maybe we can use rest operator (...) like const [, ...array] = Array(5).keys();
    – Diamond
    Mar 11, 2021 at 12:16
34

with ES6 you can do:

// `n` is the size you want to initialize your array
// `null` is what the array will be filled with (can be any other value)
Array(n).fill(null)
1
  • Since the array's values are actually filled using this solution, map and forEach will work. Nov 22, 2019 at 8:32
31

Very simple and easy to generate exactly 1 - N

const [, ...result] = Array(11).keys();

console.log('Result:', result);

30

Final Summary report .. Drrruummm Rolll -

This is the shortest code to generate an Array of size N (here 10) without using ES6. Cocco's version above is close but not the shortest.

(function(n){for(a=[];n--;a[n]=n+1);return a})(10)

But the undisputed winner of this Code golf(competition to solve a particular problem in the fewest bytes of source code) is Niko Ruotsalainen . Using Array Constructor and ES6 spread operator . (Most of the ES6 syntax is valid typeScript, but following is not. So be judicious while using it)

[...Array(10).keys()]
6
  • isn't this 0-10? [...Array(10).keys()]
    – Greg
    May 25, 2016 at 18:19
  • Webstorm suggests (new Array(10)).keys(), is it right?
    – Guy
    Jul 15, 2016 at 9:09
  • (new Array(10)).keys() , returns ArrayIterator {} , not the array
    – sapy
    Jul 15, 2016 at 19:34
  • This creates a global variable a. The loop should be for(var a=[];n--;a[n]=n+1)
    – kube
    Aug 4, 2016 at 17:09
  • you missed the Code golf(competition to solve a particular problem in the fewest bytes of source code) part in the answer :)
    – sapy
    Aug 4, 2016 at 17:33
30

https://stackoverflow.com/a/49577331/8784402

With Delta

For javascript

smallest and one-liner
[...Array(N)].map((v, i) => from + i * step);

Examples and other alternatives

Array.from(Array(10).keys()).map(i => 4 + i * 2);
//=> [4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22]

[...Array(10).keys()].map(i => 4 + i * -2);
//=> [4, 2, 0, -2, -4, -6, -8, -10, -12, -14]

Array(10).fill(0).map((v, i) => 4 + i * 2);
//=> [4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22]

Array(10).fill().map((v, i) => 4 + i * -2);
//=> [4, 2, 0, -2, -4, -6, -8, -10, -12, -14]

[...Array(10)].map((v, i) => 4 + i * 2);
//=> [4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22]
Range Function
const range = (from, to, step) =>
  [...Array(Math.floor((to - from) / step) + 1)].map((_, i) => from + i * step);

range(0, 9, 2);
//=> [0, 2, 4, 6, 8]

// can also assign range function as static method in Array class (but not recommended )
Array.range = (from, to, step) =>
  [...Array(Math.floor((to - from) / step) + 1)].map((_, i) => from + i * step);

Array.range(2, 10, 2);
//=> [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]

Array.range(0, 10, 1);
//=> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

Array.range(2, 10, -1);
//=> []

Array.range(3, 0, -1);
//=> [3, 2, 1, 0]
As Iterators
class Range {
  constructor(total = 0, step = 1, from = 0) {
    this[Symbol.iterator] = function* () {
      for (let i = 0; i < total; yield from + i++ * step) {}
    };
  }
}

[...new Range(5)]; // Five Elements
//=> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
[...new Range(5, 2)]; // Five Elements With Step 2
//=> [0, 2, 4, 6, 8]
[...new Range(5, -2, 10)]; // Five Elements With Step -2 From 10
//=>[10, 8, 6, 4, 2]
[...new Range(5, -2, -10)]; // Five Elements With Step -2 From -10
//=> [-10, -12, -14, -16, -18]

// Also works with for..of loop
for (i of new Range(5, -2, 10)) console.log(i);
// 10 8 6 4 2
As Generators Only
const Range = function* (total = 0, step = 1, from = 0) {
  for (let i = 0; i < total; yield from + i++ * step) {}
};

Array.from(Range(5, -2, -10));
//=> [-10, -12, -14, -16, -18]

[...Range(5, -2, -10)]; // Five Elements With Step -2 From -10
//=> [-10, -12, -14, -16, -18]

// Also works with for..of loop
for (i of Range(5, -2, 10)) console.log(i);
// 10 8 6 4 2

// Lazy loaded way
const number0toInf = Range(Infinity);
number0toInf.next().value;
//=> 0
number0toInf.next().value;
//=> 1
// ...

From-To with steps/delta

using iterators
class Range2 {
  constructor(to = 0, step = 1, from = 0) {
    this[Symbol.iterator] = function* () {
      let i = 0,
        length = Math.floor((to - from) / step) + 1;
      while (i < length) yield from + i++ * step;
    };
  }
}
[...new Range2(5)]; // First 5 Whole Numbers
//=> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

[...new Range2(5, 2)]; // From 0 to 5 with step 2
//=> [0, 2, 4]

[...new Range2(5, -2, 10)]; // From 10 to 5 with step -2
//=> [10, 8, 6]
using Generators
const Range2 = function* (to = 0, step = 1, from = 0) {
  let i = 0,
    length = Math.floor((to - from) / step) + 1;
  while (i < length) yield from + i++ * step;
};

[...Range2(5, -2, 10)]; // From 10 to 5 with step -2
//=> [10, 8, 6]

let even4to10 = Range2(10, 2, 4);
even4to10.next().value;
//=> 4
even4to10.next().value;
//=> 6
even4to10.next().value;
//=> 8
even4to10.next().value;
//=> 10
even4to10.next().value;
//=> undefined

For Typescript

class _Array<T> extends Array<T> {
  static range(from: number, to: number, step: number): number[] {
    return Array.from(Array(Math.floor((to - from) / step) + 1)).map(
      (v, k) => from + k * step
    );
  }
}
_Array.range(0, 9, 1);
0
26

Fast

This solution is probably fastest it is inspired by lodash _.range function (but my is simpler and faster)

let N=10, i=0, a=Array(N);

while(i<N) a[i++]=i;



console.log(a);

Performance advantages over current (2020.12.11) existing answers based on while/for

  • memory is allocated once at the beginning by a=Array(N)
  • increasing index i++ is used - which looks is about 30% faster than decreasing index i-- (probably because CPU cache memory faster in forward direction)

Speed tests with more than 20 other solutions was conducted in this answer

1
  • However, the Array(N) constructor creates an array with "holes", which may be less performant when it is actually used later. Engines use different internal representations for arrays depending on what's in them and whether they have "holes"; the internal representation can be downgraded if a hole is created, but is not upgraded when all holes are removed. In V8's terminology, this solution creates a HOLEY_SMI_ELEMENTS array, where a PACKED_SMI_ELEMENTS array would be preferable. v8.dev/blog/elements-kinds#the-elements-kind-lattice The V8 devs' advice is to use push instead.
    – kaya3
    Aug 14, 2022 at 12:46
24

There is another way in ES6, using Array.from which takes 2 arguments, the first is an arrayLike (in this case an object with length property), and the second is a mapping function (in this case we map the item to its index)

Array.from({length:10}, (v,i) => i)

this is shorter and can be used for other sequences like generating even numbers

Array.from({length:10}, (v,i) => i*2)

Also this has better performance than most other ways because it only loops once through the array. Check the snippit for some comparisons

// open the dev console to see results

count = 100000

console.time("from object")
for (let i = 0; i<count; i++) {
  range = Array.from({length:10}, (v,i) => i )
}
console.timeEnd("from object")

console.time("from keys")
for (let i =0; i<count; i++) {
  range = Array.from(Array(10).keys())
}
console.timeEnd("from keys")

console.time("apply")
for (let i = 0; i<count; i++) {
  range = Array.apply(null, { length: 10 }).map(function(element, index) { return index; })
}
console.timeEnd("apply")

2
  • Hey that's neat, I like it. However it doesn't return the results OP expects. To do that it would need to be written as Array.from({length:N}, (v,i) => i+1)
    – CervEd
    Oct 22, 2016 at 11:17
  • These neato hacks are still 5-10x slower than a good old for loop. Sep 13, 2018 at 23:22
20

Using new Array methods and => function syntax from ES6 standard (only Firefox at the time of writing).

By filling holes with undefined:

Array(N).fill().map((_, i) => i + 1);

Array.from turns "holes" into undefined so Array.map works as expected:

Array.from(Array(5)).map((_, i) => i + 1)
4
  • 8
    Similarly, you can also do the following in ES6: Array.from({length: N}, (v, k) => k). Jun 8, 2015 at 9:19
  • Xappli's approach is preferred: Array.from was created for almost this exact scenario, and it implies a mapping callback. It's an excellent solution to the general problem of wanting to use Array methods on something array-like, without resorting to verbose approaches like Array.prototype.map.call, e.g. for NodeLists returned from document.querySelectorAll. developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… Oct 16, 2015 at 2:50
  • I'm weighing this vs the underscore range syntax, and range reads better.
    – ooolala
    Nov 6, 2015 at 5:13
  • Technically it's not Array.from which turns the sparse values into undefined. Rather Array(5) is called as an arguments object which in turn interprets the sparse values as undefined values :)
    – CervEd
    Oct 22, 2016 at 11:21
20

In ES6:

Array.from({length: 1000}, (_, i) => i).slice(1);

or better yet (without the extra variable _ and without the extra slice call):

Array.from({length:1000}, Number.call, i => i + 1)

Or for slightly faster results, you can use Uint8Array, if your list is shorter than 256 results (or you can use the other Uint lists depending on how short the list is, like Uint16 for a max number of 65535, or Uint32 for a max of 4294967295 etc. Officially, these typed arrays were only added in ES6 though). For example:

Uint8Array.from({length:10}, Number.call, i => i + 1)

ES5:

Array.apply(0, {length: 1000}).map(function(){return arguments[1]+1});

Alternatively, in ES5, for the map function (like second parameter to the Array.from function in ES6 above), you can use Number.call

Array.apply(0,{length:1000}).map(Number.call,Number).slice(1)

Or, if you're against the .slice here also, you can do the ES5 equivalent of the above (from ES6), like:

Array.apply(0,{length:1000}).map(Number.call, Function("i","return i+1"))
16

Array(...Array(9)).map((_, i) => i);

console.log(Array(...Array(9)).map((_, i) => i))

1
  • Nice! Can also write this a bit more succinctly as [...Array(9)].map((_, i) => i) Feb 18, 2020 at 2:43
15
for(var i,a=[i=0];i<10;a[i++]=i);

a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

0
14

It seems the only flavor not currently in this rather complete list of answers is one featuring a generator; so to remedy that:

const gen = N => [...(function*(){let i=0;while(i<N)yield i++})()]

which can be used thus:

gen(4) // [0,1,2,3]

The nice thing about this is you don't just have to increment... To take inspiration from the answer @igor-shubin gave, you could create an array of randoms very easily:

const gen = N => [...(function*(){let i=0;
  while(i++<N) yield Math.random()
})()]

And rather than something lengthy operationally expensive like:

const slow = N => new Array(N).join().split(',').map((e,i)=>i*5)
// [0,5,10,15,...]

you could instead do:

const fast = N => [...(function*(){let i=0;while(i++<N)yield i*5})()]

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