588

Currently I am using Angular 2.0. I have an array as follows:

var channelArray: Array<string> = ['one', 'two', 'three'];

How can I check in TypeScript whether the channelArray contains a string 'three'?

4

10 Answers 10

966

The same as in JavaScript, using Array.prototype.indexOf():

console.log(channelArray.indexOf('three') > -1);

Or using ECMAScript 2016 Array.prototype.includes():

console.log(channelArray.includes('three'));

Note that you could also use methods like showed by @Nitzan to find a string. However you wouldn't usually do that for a string array, but rather for an array of objects. There those methods were more sensible. For example

const arr = [{foo: 'bar'}, {foo: 'bar'}, {foo: 'baz'}];
console.log(arr.find(e => e.foo === 'bar')); // {foo: 'bar'} (first match)
console.log(arr.some(e => e.foo === 'bar')); // true
console.log(arr.filter(e => e.foo === 'bar')); // [{foo: 'bar'}, {foo: 'bar'}]

Reference

Array.find()

Array.some()

Array.filter()

2
  • 2
    I get an [ts] Property 'includes' does not exist on type 'string[]' error, do I need to update my tsconfig to support this ecma 6 feature?
    – S..
    Jan 29, 2019 at 0:38
  • 5
    Figured it out. I needed to add "es7" into the array for property "lib" in my tsconfig.json file, eg. "lib": ["es7", "dom"]
    – S..
    Jan 29, 2019 at 0:42
165

You can use the some method:

console.log(channelArray.some(x => x === "three")); // true

You can use the find method:

console.log(channelArray.find(x => x === "three")); // three

Or you can use the indexOf method:

console.log(channelArray.indexOf("three")); // 2
0
70

If your code is ES7 based (or upper versions):

channelArray.includes('three'); //will return true or false

If not, for example you are using IE with no babel transpile:

channelArray.indexOf('three') !== -1; //will return true or false

the indexOf method will return the position the element has into the array, because of that we use !== different from -1 if the needle is found at the first position.

38

Also note that "in" keyword does not work on arrays. It works on objects only.

propName in myObject

Array inclusion test is

myArray.includes('three');
1
  • 8
    That's a pitfall worth mentioning, particularly if you come from Python. Even worse, it somehow works on arrays as well since they are objects, too. I just doesn't work in the way you probably think it should - it checks whether something exists in the array as index instead.
    – Cito
    Jun 17, 2019 at 15:06
24

Use JavaScript Array includes() Method

var fruits = ["Banana", "Orange", "Apple", "Mango"];
var n = fruits.includes("Mango");

Try it Yourself » link

Definition

The includes() method determines whether an array contains a specified element.

This method returns true if the array contains the element, and false if not.

9

TS has many utility methods for arrays which are available via the prototype of Arrays. There are multiple which can achieve this goal but the two most convenient for this purpose are:

  1. Array.indexOf() Takes any value as an argument and then returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
  2. Array.includes() Takes any value as an argument and then determines whether an array includes a this value. The method returning true if the value is found, otherwise false.

Example:

const channelArray: string[] = ['one', 'two', 'three'];

console.log(channelArray.indexOf('three'));      // 2
console.log(channelArray.indexOf('three') > -1); // true
console.log(channelArray.indexOf('four') > -1);  // false
console.log(channelArray.includes('three'));     // true
5

You can use filter too

this.products = array_products.filter((x) => x.Name.includes("ABC"))
0

do like this:

departments: string[]=[];
if(this.departments.indexOf(this.departmentName.trim()) >-1 ){
            return;
    }
0

Today I came across that case. If you need to use Array.include() but your variable or constant is:

const validNumbers: TValidNumber[] = ['one', 'two', 'three'];

You will likely face the problem that the "includes" method only accepts the "TValidNumber" type as a parameter, and you are likely passing a "string" to it. I couldn't find an answer in the 20 minutes I spent researching this, so after trying, I found that you can tell or assign the type to "validNumbers" to be both an Array of TValidNumber and an Array of "string" in the following way:

const validNumbers: TValidNumber[] & string[] = ['one', 'two', 'three'];

From hating TypeScript to loving it with great force in an instant hehehe, just as it has helped me, I hope it helps a lot of people.

-1

Using the findIndex method we can obtain the index of the array and thus achieve a comparison using the startsWith method

  const array = ["one", "two", "three"];

  const myArray = (arr, v) => {
    return arr.findIndex((item) => item.startsWith(v)) > -1;
  };

  console.log(myArray(array, "five")); // false
  console.log(myArray(array, "two")); // true
  console.log(myArray([], "two")); // false

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