255

As described here TypeScript introduces a foreach loop:

var someArray = [9, 2, 5];
for (var item of someArray) {
    console.log(item); // 9,2,5
}

But isn't there any index/key? I would expect something like:

for (var item, key of someArray) { ... }

5 Answers 5

450

.forEach already has this ability:

const someArray = [9, 2, 5];
someArray.forEach((value, index) => {
    console.log(index); // 0, 1, 2
    console.log(value); // 9, 2, 5
});

But if you want the abilities of for...of, then you can map the array to the index and value:

for (const { index, value } of someArray.map((value, index) => ({ index, value }))) {
    console.log(index); // 0, 1, 2
    console.log(value); // 9, 2, 5
}

That's a little long, so it may help to put it in a reusable function:

function toEntries<T>(a: T[]) {
    return a.map((value, index) => [index, value] as const);
}

for (const [index, value] of toEntries(someArray)) {
    // ..etc..
}

Iterable Version

This will work when targeting ES3 or ES5 if you compile with the --downlevelIteration compiler option.

function* toEntries<T>(values: T[] | IterableIterator<T>) {
    let index = 0;
    for (const value of values) {
        yield [index, value] as const;
        index++;
    }
}

Array.prototype.entries() - ES6+

If you are able to target ES6+ environments then you can use the .entries() method as outlined in Arnavion's answer.

6
  • But TypeScript compiles "for ... of" to a simple "for" which has an index var _i. So it would be easy for TypeScript developers to let us use this _i. See playground example: bit.ly/1R9SfBR
    – Mick
    Mar 20, 2016 at 16:16
  • 2
    @Mick it depends on the target. When transpiling to ES6 it doesn't do that. The reason for that extra code when transpiling is only to get the ES6 code to work in past versions. Mar 20, 2016 at 16:26
  • 3
    How can you do a break; in that forEach? Aug 1, 2017 at 10:45
  • Also a good answer stackoverflow.com/questions/34348937/… Mar 1, 2018 at 5:09
  • @JoãoSilva you can use Array.some() and return false at the iteration you want to stop. It's not nearly as clear or pretty as a break but it would get the job done. Personally I don't like it, I'd probably re-write the iteration in some other way :) see stackoverflow.com/questions/2641347/…
    – Neek
    Mar 6, 2020 at 3:15
81

See: Array.prototype.entries()

for (const [key, item] of someArray.entries()) { ... }

In TS this requires targeting ES2015 since it requires the runtime to support iterators, which ES5 runtimes don't. You can of course use something like Babel to make the output work on ES5 runtimes.

1
60

"Old school javascript" to the rescue (for those who aren't familiar/in love of functional programming)

for (let i = 0; i < someArray.length ; i++) {
  let item = someArray[i];
}
2
  • 2
    I actually prefer this answer the best. No using of extra methods just to generate an index for each element. Sep 11, 2019 at 10:36
  • Thank youuu veryyyy muuuchh! We did not know this :)
    – TSR
    Apr 27, 2020 at 3:16
19

You can use the for..in TypeScript operator to access the index when dealing with collections.

var test = [7,8,9];
for (var i in test) {
   console.log(i + ': ' + test[i]);
} 

Output:

 0: 7
 1: 8
 2: 9

See Demo

2
  • 3
    Be aware that "i" is a string not an int with for..in loop. Performing arithmetic operation with "i" will result in string concatenation. (i + 1) will be equal to "01" for example when i = 0
    – Stéphane
    Jan 22, 2019 at 15:27
  • for..in can also give you more than you were expecting as it includes all functions declared on an object as well. For example: for (var prop in window.document) { console.log(prop); }
    – Ken Lyon
    Jun 28, 2019 at 16:56
9

Or another old school solution:

var someArray = [9, 2, 5];
let i = 0;
for (var item of someArray) {
    console.log(item); // 9,2,5
    i++;
}

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