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Array.prototype.find()

{{JSRef}} 

The find() method of {{jsxref("Array")}}  instances returns the first element in the provided array that satisfies the provided testing function. If no values satisfy the testing function, {{jsxref("undefined")}}  is returned.

{{InteractiveExample("JavaScript Demo: Array.find()", "shorter")}} 

const array1 = [5, 12, 8, 130, 44];

const found = array1.find((element) => element > 10);

console.log(found);
// Expected output: 12

Syntax

find(callbackFn)
find(callbackFn, thisArg)

Parameters

Return value

The first element in the array that satisfies the provided testing function. Otherwise, {{jsxref("undefined")}}  is returned.

Description

The find() method is an iterative method. It calls a provided callbackFn function once for each element in an array in ascending-index order, until callbackFn returns a truthy value. find() then returns that element and stops iterating through the array. If callbackFn never returns a truthy value, find() returns {{jsxref("undefined")}} . Read the iterative methods section for more information about how these methods work in general.

callbackFn is invoked for every index of the array, not just those with assigned values. Empty slots in sparse arrays behave the same as undefined.

The find() method is generic. It only expects the this value to have a length property and integer-keyed properties.

Examples

Find an object in an array by one of its properties

const inventory = [
  { name: "apples", quantity: 2 },
  { name: "bananas", quantity: 0 },
  { name: "cherries", quantity: 5 },
];

function isCherries(fruit) {
  return fruit.name === "cherries";
}

console.log(inventory.find(isCherries));
// { name: 'cherries', quantity: 5 }

Using arrow function and destructuring

const inventory = [
  { name: "apples", quantity: 2 },
  { name: "bananas", quantity: 0 },
  { name: "cherries", quantity: 5 },
];

const result = inventory.find(({ name }) => name === "cherries");

console.log(result); // { name: 'cherries', quantity: 5 }

Find the first prime number in an array

The following example returns the first element in the array that is a prime number, or {{jsxref("undefined")}}  if there is no prime number.

function isPrime(element, index, array) {
  let start = 2;
  while (start <= Math.sqrt(element)) {
    if (element % start++ < 1) {
      return false;
    }
  }
  return element > 1;
}

console.log([4, 6, 8, 12].find(isPrime)); // undefined, not found
console.log([4, 5, 8, 12].find(isPrime)); // 5

Using the third argument of callbackFn

The array argument is useful if you want to access another element in the array, especially when you don’t have an existing variable that refers to the array. The following example first uses filter() to extract the positive values and then uses find() to find the first element that is less than its neighbors.

const numbers = [3, -1, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9, 2, 6];
const firstTrough = numbers
  .filter((num) => num > 0)
  .find((num, idx, arr) => {
    // Without the arr argument, there's no way to easily access the
    // intermediate array without saving it to a variable.
    if (idx > 0 && num >= arr[idx - 1]) return false;
    if (idx < arr.length - 1 && num >= arr[idx + 1]) return false;
    return true;
  });
console.log(firstTrough); // 1

Using find() on sparse arrays

Empty slots in sparse arrays are visited, and are treated the same as undefined.

// Declare array with no elements at indexes 2, 3, and 4
const array = [0, 1, , , , 5, 6];

// Shows all indexes, not just those with assigned values
array.find((value, index) => {
  console.log("Visited index", index, "with value", value);
});
// Visited index 0 with value 0
// Visited index 1 with value 1
// Visited index 2 with value undefined
// Visited index 3 with value undefined
// Visited index 4 with value undefined
// Visited index 5 with value 5
// Visited index 6 with value 6

// Shows all indexes, including deleted
array.find((value, index) => {
  // Delete element 5 on first iteration
  if (index === 0) {
    console.log("Deleting array[5] with value", array[5]);
    delete array[5];
  }
  // Element 5 is still visited even though deleted
  console.log("Visited index", index, "with value", value);
});
// Deleting array[5] with value 5
// Visited index 0 with value 0
// Visited index 1 with value 1
// Visited index 2 with value undefined
// Visited index 3 with value undefined
// Visited index 4 with value undefined
// Visited index 5 with value undefined
// Visited index 6 with value 6

Calling find() on non-array objects

The find() method reads the length property of this and then accesses each property whose key is a nonnegative integer less than length.

const arrayLike = {
  length: 3,
  "-1": 0.1, // ignored by find() since -1 < 0
  0: 2,
  1: 7.3,
  2: 4,
};
console.log(Array.prototype.find.call(arrayLike, (x) => !Number.isInteger(x)));
// 7.3

Specifications

{{Specifications}} 

Browser compatibility

{{Compat}} 

See also

In this article

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