I have an array that I've created in TypeScript and it has a property that I use as a key. If I have that key, how can I remove an item from it?
20 Answers
Same way as you would in JavaScript.
delete myArray[key];
Note that this sets the element to undefined
.
Better to use the Array.prototype.splice
function:
const index = myArray.indexOf(key, 0);
if (index > -1) {
myArray.splice(index, 1);
}
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13You can add a type to that!
var index: number = myArray.indexOf(key, 0);
Dec 19, 2015 at 0:38 -
31@CorayThan Surely it would be implicitly typed as
indexOf
returns anumber
?– ChrisJun 8, 2016 at 10:27 -
8@Chris While it's obvious in this simple case, it can help you diagnose bugs faster if you define a type for every variable explicitly. You're using
index
in more than once place already and one of those places (splice
) wants to see a number or you'll get an error. Currently the compiler can't prevent you making mistakes there. Nov 2, 2016 at 9:56 -
51@blorkfish it's good to mention that if you have a list of objects, you can use
var index = myArray.findIndex(x => x.prop==key.prop);
. Apr 4, 2017 at 14:06 -
11@Cirelli94 - you're responding to an older thread, but the answer to your question is that deleting an array element does not change its length or re-index the array. Because arrays are objects in JavaScript,
delete myArr[2]
literally deletes the property2
ofmyArr
, which is also different thanmyArr[2] = undefined
. The moral of this story is to just usesplice
for this task because it is a safe way to get the desired effect without confusing side effects.– ElianoraFeb 28, 2018 at 4:23
let foo_object; // Itemitem(object here) to remove
this.foo_objects = this.foo_objects.filter(obj => return obj !== foo_object);
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62This does not remove anything it simply filters. If the list actually needs to be modified this is not the way. Jun 13, 2017 at 18:29
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11@user573434 yes, you are right, as the name indicate. But this is simple approach in case where you want to remove an object on successful delete api call etc. Jun 14, 2017 at 9:10
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5This worked perfectly for me on an array of objects without a unique key property. @user573434 the filter method returns a new array without the filtered object, so the resulting array does have the object removed. Jun 25, 2017 at 3:22
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7i think in order to return it as an object you have to do this
this.foo_objects = this.foo_objects.filter(obj => obj !== foo_object)[0];
Jun 30, 2017 at 12:12 -
5
With ES6 you can use this code :
removeDocument(doc){
this.documents.forEach( (item, index) => {
if(item === doc) this.documents.splice(index,1);
});
}
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3Best solution to remove without changing array reference AND with possibility to implement specific equality algorythm– SidNov 21, 2017 at 10:43
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1
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1
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3You can also use: this.documents.forEach( (item, index, array) => { if(item === doc) array.splice(index,1); }); Which can be a lot cleaner, especially when working with nested arrays. Apr 15, 2019 at 15:03
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3@MashukurRahman question is about how to remove one item, not multiple ocurrences Jul 5, 2021 at 0:57
It is my solution for that:
onDelete(id: number) {
this.service.delete(id).then(() => {
let index = this.documents.findIndex(d => d.id === id); //find index in your array
this.documents.splice(index, 1);//remove element from array
});
event.stopPropagation();
}
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What's nice about this solution is that it will work even when object equality fails to identify two objects as equal. Jun 8, 2018 at 20:00
let departments is an array. You want to remove an item from this array.
departments: string[] = [];
removeDepartment(name: string): void {
this.departments = this.departments.filter(item => item != name);
}
You can use the splice
method on an array to remove the elements.
for example if you have an array with the name arr
use the following:
arr.splice(2, 1);
so here the element with index 2 will be the starting point and the argument 2 will determine how many elements to be deleted.
If you want to delete the last element of the array named arr
then do this:
arr.splice(arr.length-1, 1);
This will return arr with the last element deleted.
Example:
var arr = ["orange", "mango", "banana", "sugar", "tea"];
arr.splice(arr.length-1, 1)
console.log(arr); // return ["orange", "mango", "banana", "sugar"]
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4Just FYI, the splice method modifies the array (so in this case removes the last item) and returns the removed item(s), not the array itself. Apr 16, 2019 at 6:55
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2It should actually be arr.splice(arr.length-1,1) to remove the last element. Dec 11, 2019 at 22:16
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2In order to delete the last element of an array, I'd use Array's
pop
method instead ofsplice
. Jan 26, 2021 at 11:10
Here's a simple one liner for removing an object by property from an array of objects.
delete this.items[this.items.findIndex(item => item.item_id == item_id)];
or
this.items = this.items.filter(item => item.item_id !== item.item_id);
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4The problem with first solution is that delete removes element, but array size remains the same as before deteling. In second solution we will have a new object, so if we have spme dependency then we are losing it. Splice (which is in the top answer) does not have this effect.– KrystianNov 13, 2019 at 14:20
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Thanks for pointing that out. I think in my use case I had not discovered that yet. Well observed :) Dec 14, 2019 at 18:36
This worked for me.
Your array:
DummyArray: any = [
{ "id": 1, "name": 'A' },
{ "id": 2, "name": 'B' },
{ "id": 3, "name": 'C' },
{ "id": 4, "name": 'D' }
]
Function:
remove() {
this.DummyArray = this.DummyArray.filter(item => item !== item);
}
Note: This function deletes all the objects form your array. If you want to delete a specific object from array then use this method:
remove(id) {
this.DummyArray = this.DummyArray.filter(item => item.id !== id);
}
Multiple options in Typescript/Javascript to remove an element from Array. Splice is the best option as
- It removes inline without creating a new object
- It properly updates the length of the array (wont leave blank null element)
Below is an example of removing an object based on some field in a object array using Splice function
const persons = [
{
firstName :'John',
lastName :'Michel'
},
{
firstName :'William',
lastName :'Scott'
},
{
firstName :'Amanda',
lastName :'Tailor'
}
]
console.log('Before Deleting :'+JSON.stringify(persons));
console.log('Deleting William:');
persons.splice(persons.findIndex(item => item.firstName === 'William'),1);
console.log('After Deleting William'+JSON.stringify(persons));
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1I think you have misused the word 'mutate' here because splice definitely mutates the original object– myolOct 25, 2021 at 12:27
Use this, if you need to remove a given object from an array and you want to be sure of the following:
- the list is not reinitialized
- the array length is properly updated
const objWithIdToRemove;
const objIndex = this.objectsArray.findIndex(obj => obj.id === objWithIdToRemove);
if (objIndex > -1) {
this.objectsArray.splice(objIndex, 1);
}
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Could you please share why you used const for every variable? Dec 16, 2020 at 7:55
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@shivamsrivastava I like the code to be immutable where is possible; because of that I was using
const
instead oflet
. Dec 18, 2020 at 12:45
let a: number[] = [];
a.push(1);
a.push(2);
a.push(3);
let index: number = a.findIndex(a => a === 1);
if (index != -1) {
a.splice(index, 1);
}
console.log(a);
Answer using TypeScript spread operator (...)
// Your key
const key = 'two';
// Your array
const arr = [
'one',
'two',
'three'
];
// Get either the index or -1
const index = arr.indexOf(key); // returns 0
// Despite a real index, or -1, use spread operator and Array.prototype.slice()
const newArray = (index > -1) ? [
...arr.slice(0, index),
...arr.slice(index + 1)
] : arr;
One more solution using Typescript:
let updatedArray = [];
for (let el of this.oldArray) {
if (el !== elementToRemove) {
updated.push(el);
}
}
this.oldArray = updated;
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While this does resolve the problem asked, it is expensive to execute because of the creation of a new array and looping over the original. Doing this kind of operation on a huge array could produce undesirable side effects like, harder on mobile batteries, long waiting, jank, etc.– JessyAug 31, 2018 at 19:10
function myFunction(ID){
let index = this.myArray.findIndex(d => d.ID === ID); //find index in your array
console.log('index==',index);
if (index > -1) {
console.log('remaving at',index);
this.myArray.splice(index, 1);//remove element from array
}
}
Note: Your array must have a property called ID... otherwise it will return -1 which means not found
Just wanted to add extension method for an array.
interface Array<T> {
remove(element: T): Array<T>;
}
Array.prototype.remove = function (element) {
const index = this.indexOf(element, 0);
if (index > -1) {
return this.splice(index, 1);
}
return this;
};
Similar to Abdus Salam Azad answer , but passing array as parameter from //https://love2dev.com/blog/javascript-remove-from-array/
function arrayRemove(arr:[], value:any) {
return arr.filter(function(ele){
return ele != value;
});
}
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1This is not "removing an item", this is "creating a new array without that item". Entirely different things. Jan 15, 2022 at 16:32
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@Clashsoft, true, but people often prefer immutable calls. If you want , you can re-assign result to the same variable myArr=arrayRemove(myArr, elemToRemove). Jan 16, 2022 at 5:43
_.pull(array,'a');
with a lib lodash https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.15#pull
complelte code:
import _ from 'lodash';
const allTagList = ['a','b','b']
_.pull(allTagList, b);
console.log(allTagList) // result: ['a']
PS: Lodash offer lots of operator, recommed to use it to simply your code. https://lodash.com
You can try to get index or position of list or array first, then use for loop to assign current array to a temp list, filter out unwanted item and store wanted item back to original array
removeItem(index) {
var tempList = this.uploadFile;
this.uploadFile = [];
for (var j = 0; j < tempList.length; j++) {
if (j != index)
this.uploadFile.push(tempList[j]);
}
}
We can implement the logic using filter
and includes
const checkAlpha2Code = ['BD', 'NZ', 'IN']
let countryAlpha2Code = ['US', 'CA', 'BD', 'NZ', 'AF' , 'AR' , 'BR']
/**
* Returns the modified array countryAlpha2Code
* after removing elements which matches with the checkAlpha2Code
*/
countryAlpha2Code = countryAlpha2Code.filter(alpha2code => {
return !checkAlpha2Code.includes(alpha2code);
});
console.log(countryAlpha2Code)
// Output: [ 'US', 'CA', 'AF', 'AR', 'BR' ]
// Resetting the values again
countryAlpha2Code = ['US', 'CA', 'BD', 'NZ', 'AF' , 'AR' , 'BR']
/**
* Returns the modified array countryAlpha2Code
* which only matches elements with the checkAlpha2Code
*/
countryAlpha2Code = countryAlpha2Code.filter(alpha2code => {
return checkAlpha2Code.includes(alpha2code);
});
console.log(countryAlpha2Code)
// Output: [ 'BD', 'NZ' ]
I see many complaints that remove
method is not in-built. Consider using Set
instead of array - it has add
and delete
methods in-built.