95

In underscore, I can successfully find an item with a specific key value

var tv = [{id:1},{id:2}]
var voteID = 2;
var data = _.find(tv, function(voteItem){ return voteItem.id == voteID; });
//data = { id: 2 }

but how do I find what array index that object occurred at?

5

13 Answers 13

179

findIndex was added in 1.8:

index = _.findIndex(tv, function(voteItem) { return voteItem.id == voteID })

See: http://underscorejs.org/#findIndex

Alternatively, this also works, if you don't mind making another temporary list:

index = _.indexOf(_.pluck(tv, 'id'), voteId);

See: http://underscorejs.org/#pluck

2
  • I'm not sure about underscore but in lodash you don't need an anonymous function, simply index = _.findIndex(tv, {id: voteID}) will work, also works if the tv collection has more complicated values (more than just an id property) Oct 9, 2015 at 21:25
  • 1
    Just a point using pluck is so much slower. I because of its extra traverse. jsperf.com/compare-find-index Nov 8, 2016 at 6:26
44

Lo-Dash, which extends Underscore, has findIndex method, that can find the index of a given instance, or by a given predicate, or according to the properties of a given object.

In your case, I would do:

var index = _.findIndex(tv, { id: voteID });

Give it a try.

3
  • findIntex it'ts a method from lo-dash, not from underscore Jan 8, 2015 at 16:40
  • 4
    @WallyssonNunes This is exactly what I wrote - "Lo-Dash, which extends Underscore, has findIndex method"
    – splintor
    Jan 10, 2015 at 20:57
  • 3
    This is now part of the standard underscore library, as of version 1.8.0: underscorejs.org/#1.8.0 Feb 26, 2015 at 21:21
38

If you want to stay with underscore so your predicate function can be more flexible, here are 2 ideas.

Method 1

Since the predicate for _.find receives both the value and index of an element, you can use side effect to retrieve the index, like this:

var idx;
_.find(tv, function(voteItem, voteIdx){ 
   if(voteItem.id == voteID){ idx = voteIdx; return true;}; 
});

Method 2

Looking at underscore source, this is how _.find is implemented:

_.find = _.detect = function(obj, predicate, context) {
  var result;
  any(obj, function(value, index, list) {
    if (predicate.call(context, value, index, list)) {
      result = value;
      return true;
    }
  });
  return result;
};

To make this a findIndex function, simply replace the line result = value; with result = index; This is the same idea as the first method. I included it to point out that underscore uses side effect to implement _.find as well.

28

I don't know if there is an existing underscore method that does this, but you can achieve the same result with plain javascript.

Array.prototype.getIndexBy = function (name, value) {
    for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) {
        if (this[i][name] == value) {
            return i;
        }
    }
    return -1;
}

Then you can just do:

var data = tv[tv.getIndexBy("id", 2)]

1
  • 4
    Why not a return -1; by default? Sep 18, 2015 at 23:06
13

If your target environment supports ES2015 (or you have a transpile step, eg with Babel), you can use the native Array.prototype.findIndex().

Given your example

const array = [ {id:1}, {id:2} ]
const desiredId = 2;
const index = array.findIndex(obj => obj.id === desiredId);
4

you can use indexOf method from lodash

var tv = [{id:1},{id:2}]
var voteID = 2;
var data = _.find(tv, function(voteItem){ return voteItem.id == voteID; });
var index=_.indexOf(tv,data);
3

Keepin' it simple:

// Find the index of the first element in array
// meeting specified condition.
//
var findIndex = function(arr, cond) {
  var i, x;
  for (i in arr) {
    x = arr[i];
    if (cond(x)) return parseInt(i);
  }
};

var idIsTwo = function(x) { return x.id == 2 }
var tv = [ {id: 1}, {id: 2} ]
var i = findIndex(tv, idIsTwo) // 1

Or, for non-haters, the CoffeeScript variant:

findIndex = (arr, cond) ->
  for i, x of arr
    return parseInt(i) if cond(x)
2
  • 1
    better would be return parseInt(i) for i, x of array when cond(x)
    – user229044
    Aug 12, 2014 at 18:51
  • 1
    how this is simple than previous answers??
    – ncubica
    Jun 23, 2015 at 3:19
2

This is to help lodash users. check if your key is present by doing:

hideSelectedCompany(yourKey) {
 return _.findIndex(yourArray, n => n === yourKey) === -1;
}
1

The simplest solution is to use lodash:

  1. Install lodash:

npm install --save lodash

  1. Use method findIndex:

const _ = require('lodash');

findIndexByElementKeyValue = (elementKeyValue) => {
  return _.findIndex(array, arrayItem => arrayItem.keyelementKeyValue);
}
0

If you're expecting multiple matches and hence need an array to be returned, try:

_.where(Users, {age: 24})

If the property value is unique and you need the index of the match, try:

_.findWhere(Users, {_id: 10})
0
Array.prototype.getIndex = function (obj) {
    for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) {
        if (this[i][Id] == obj.Id) {
            return i;
        }
    }
    return -1;
}

List.getIndex(obj);
0

I got similar case but in contrary is to find the used key based on index of a given object's. I could find solution in underscore using Object.values to returns object in to an array to get the occurred index.

var tv = {id1:1,id2:2};
var voteIndex = 1;
console.log(_.findKey(tv, function(item) {
  return _.indexOf(Object.values(tv), item) == voteIndex;
}));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/underscore.js/1.9.1/underscore-min.js"></script>

0

And If you want some particular key value from an object by id then use

var tv = [{id:1, name:"ABC"},{id:2, name:xyz}]

_.find(tv , {id:1}).value // retrun "ABC"
1
  • But how do I know the index of that result?
    – Bcktr
    Apr 16, 2022 at 3:59

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