I want to remove all elements of value x from an array that contains x, y and z elements
let arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'b']
How can I remove all elements of value 'b' from arr?
A filter:
let farray = arr.filter {$0 != "b"}
'
, you would need to use "
. so the answer will be let something = arr.filter{$0 != "b"}
Commented
Sep 12, 2015 at 14:41
If you need to modify initial array, you can use the function removeAll(where:)
that is available in Swift 4.2/Xcode 10:
var arr = ["a", "b", "c", "b"]
arr.removeAll(where: { $0 == "b" })
print(arr) // output is ["a", "c"]
However, if you are using Xcode 9 you can find this function in Xcode9to10Preparation (this library provides implementations of some new functions from Xcode 10).
var array : [String]
array = ["one","two","one"]
let itemToRemove = "one"
while array.contains(itemToRemove) {
if let itemToRemoveIndex = array.index(of: itemToRemove) {
array.remove(at: itemToRemoveIndex)
}
}
print(array)
Works on Swift 3.0.
filter
solution
Commented
Nov 15, 2015 at 18:01
filter
. I guess comparing like that doesn't make much sense anyway since the results highly depend on how frequent and how evenly distributed are the items to remove in the source array.
filter
was never faster gist.github.com/getaaron/11b751b15489b0b95e9e
Commented
Nov 15, 2015 at 18:52
contains
and index(of:)
. It would be much faster to use just index(of) since it returns an optional.
Commented
Feb 3, 2018 at 20:35
EDITED according to comments:
I like this approach:
var arr = ["a", "b", "c", "b"]
while let idx = arr.index(of:"b") {
arr.remove(at: idx)
}
Original answer (before editing):
let arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'b']
if let idx = arr.index(of:"b") {
arr.remove(at: idx)
}
if
by while
.
In Swift 3 I simply do:
arr = arr.filter { $0 != "a" }
.filter, .sort and .map are great for saving time and solve lots of problems with little code.
This article has good examples and explain the differences and how they work: https://useyourloaf.com/blog/swift-guide-to-map-filter-reduce/
If you have more than one element to remove, thanks to first answer.
var mainArray = ["a", "b", "qw", "qe"]
let thingsToRemoveArray = ["qw", "b"]
for k in thingsToRemoveArray {
mainArray = mainArray.filter {$0 != k}
}
A general approach is to exploit first class procedures. (However, this approach is much more powerful than what is required for your question.) To illustrate, say you want to avoid "Justin" repeatedly in many collections.
let avoidJustin = notEqualTester ("Justin")
let arrayOfUsers = // ...
arrayOfUsers.filter (avoidJustin)
let arrayOfFriends = // ...
arrayOfFriends.filter (avoidJustin)
With this, you avoid repeatedly creating a closure each time you want to avoid Justin. Here is notEqualTester
which, given a that
, returns a function of this
that returns this != that
.
func notEqualTester<T: Equatable> (that:T) -> ((this:T) -> Bool) {
return { (this:T) -> Bool in return this != that }
}
The returned closure for this
captures the value for that
- which can be useful when that
is no longer available.
If you only have one element of that value, this would probably be the easiest.
arr.remove(at: arr.index(of: ‘b’))