0

Having an array like this

myArray = ["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, null, 423.2, null, null];

is there a way to get the last non-null element?

In this case it should be 423.2.

2

4 Answers 4

9

The easiest way of doing this is to filter out the null items using .filter, and then get the last element using .slice:

lastNonNull = myArray.filter(x => x != null).slice(-1)[0]
console.log(lastNonNull) // 432.2

To break this down a bit:

myArray
    .filter(x => x != null)    // returns ["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, 423.2]
    .slice(-1)                 // returns [423.2]
    [0]                        // returns 423.2 
8

Another way is Array#reduce():

var myArray = ["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, null, 423.2, null, null];
var last = myArray.reduce((acc, curr) => curr ? curr : acc);
console.log(last);

5

Use reverse and find

["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, null, 423.2, null, null].reverse().find( s => s != null )

Or just one reduceRight

var arr = ["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, null, 423.2, null, null]
arr.reduceRight( (a,c) => ( c != null && a == null ? c : a) , null)
3
  • This is awesome and really concise, but it wouldn't work if the list contained a 'falsey' item, e.g. 0 or "". Mar 9, 2018 at 9:53
  • @AaronChristiansen Check now Mar 9, 2018 at 9:54
  • That's better; upvoted. Much more concise than my solution! Mar 9, 2018 at 9:55
2

You can use filter to filter the non null elements and use pop to get the last element.

let myArray = ["test", 32.5, 11.3, 0.65, 533.2, null, 423.2, null, null];
let result = myArray.filter( v => v !== null ).pop();
  
console.log( result );

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