196

Python has a built-in function enumerate, to get an iterable of (index, item) pairs.

Does ES6 have an equivalent for an array? What is it?

def elements_with_index(elements):
    modified_elements = []
    for i, element in enumerate(elements):
         modified_elements.append("%d:%s" % (i, element))
    return modified_elements

print(elements_with_index(["a","b"]))
#['0:a', '1:b']

ES6 equivalent without enumerate:

function elements_with_index(elements){
     return elements.map(element => elements.indexOf(element) + ':' + element);
 }

console.log(elements_with_index(['a','b']))
//[ '0:a', '1:b' ]
3
  • but map or forEach do this already, can get both element and index
    – juvian
    Dec 17, 2015 at 14:27
  • As @juvian says, why not just use the index available in the map? elements.map(( element, i ) => `${ i }:${ element }`); Dec 17, 2015 at 14:30
  • 1
    @JamesAllardice with the doc from mozilla : elements.map((element,index) => index + ':' + element) Dec 17, 2015 at 14:33

6 Answers 6

261

Yes there is, check out Array.prototype.entries().

const foobar = ['A', 'B', 'C'];

for (const [index, element] of foobar.entries()) {
  console.log(index, element);
}

3
  • 6
    This, so simple, so cool. It's closer to the python enumerate than [].map(), it returns an iterator.
    – Shanoor
    Dec 17, 2015 at 14:32
  • 4
    This is not equivalent to using map((el, idx) => ..), since maybe you want to perform a filter but keep the indexes you had before filtering. Feb 5, 2018 at 15:19
  • 2
    How does this work with types that have Symbol.iterator function defined? Python's counterpart enumerate accepts any iterable. Jul 17, 2021 at 17:50
58

Array.prototype.map

Array.prototype.map already gives you the index as the second argument to the callback procedure... And it's supported almost everywhere.

['a','b'].map(function(element, index) { return index + ':' + element; });
//=> ["0:a", "1:b"]

I like ES6 too

['a','b'].map((e,i) => `${i}:${e}`)
//=> ["0:a", "1:b"]

make it lazy

However, python's enumerate is lazy and so we should model that characteristic as well -

function* enumerate (it, start = 0)
{ let i = start
  for (const x of it)
    yield [i++, x]
}

for (const [i, x] of enumerate("abcd"))
  console.log(i, x)

0 a
1 b
2 c
3 d

Specifying the second argument, start, allows the caller to control the transform of the index -

for (const [i, x] of enumerate("abcd", 100))
  console.log(i, x)
100 a
101 b
102 c
103 d
2
  • 3
    this is imo better than entries() Jun 2, 2020 at 23:35
  • @StephenBoesch it depends.. is it possible to break the .map approach? Feb 19, 2021 at 22:31
28

let array = [1, 3, 5];
for (let [index, value] of array.entries()) 
     console.log(index + '=' + value);

8

Excuse me if I'm being ignorant (bit of a newbie to JavaScript here), but can't you just use forEach? e.g:

function withIndex(elements) {
    var results = [];
    elements.forEach(function(e, ind) {
        results.push(`${e}:${ind}`);
    });
    return results;
}

alert(withIndex(['a', 'b']));

There's also naomik's answer which is a better fit for this particular use case, but I just wanted to point out that forEach also fits the bill.

ES5+ supported.

6

pythonic offers an enumerate function that works on all iterables, not just arrays, and returns an Iterator, like python:

import {enumerate} from 'pythonic';

const arr = ['a', 'b'];
for (const [index, value] of enumerate(arr))
    console.log(`index: ${index}, value: ${value}`);
// index: 0, value: a
// index: 1, value: b

Disclosure I'm author and maintainer of Pythonic

3
  • 4
    Please mention that you help develop pythonic. According to How to not be a spammer in Stack Overflow's Help Center, "The community here tends to vote down overt self-promotion and flag it as spam. Post good, relevant answers, and if some (but not all) happen to be about your product or website, that’s okay. However, you must disclose your affiliation in your answers." Jun 8, 2019 at 0:37
  • 3
    @Keyvan Solomon is completely correct. You own this library, you are the sole author and contributor to it. The way you choose to license it not relevant. You are required to disclose your ownership of or affiliation with any libraries, products, articles, etc which you recommend or link to in your posts. This is a very simple requirement, nobody is being rude to you or asking for anything unreasonable.
    – user229044
    Jun 8, 2019 at 2:59
  • Added per your request
    – Keyvan
    Jun 24, 2019 at 22:57
3

as Kyle and Shanoor say is Array.prototype.entries()

but for newbie like me, hard to fully understand its meaning.

so here give an understandable example:

for(let curIndexValueList of someArray.entries()){
  console.log("curIndexValueList=", curIndexValueList)
  let curIndex = curIndexValueList[0]
  let curValue = curIndexValueList[1]
  console.log("curIndex=", curIndex, ", curValue=", curValue)
}

equivalent to python code:

for curIndex, curValue in enumerate(someArray):
  print("curIndex=%s, curValue=%s" % (curIndex, curValue))
}

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