Today we are exploring the find()
array method in JavaScript.
I find this method very similar to the some()
method.
What it does is it searches the array for a specific hit, but instead of returning a boolean, it will return the first match it finds.
Using the Javascript find() method
Let's start by creating an array of items.
const items = [
{ name: 'T-shirt plain', price: 9 },
{ name: 'T-shirt print', price: 20 },
{ name: 'Jeans', price: 30 },
{ name: 'Cap', price: 5 }
];
Let's find the first item that is under the price of 10.
const haveNames = items.find(item => {
return item.price < 10;
});
// { name: 'T-shirt plain', price: 9 }
This can also be written as a one-liner:
const found = items.find(item => item.price < 10);
Some use cases could be the first blog-post with the same category.
To see this in action let's say we are currently viewing this article:
const blog = {
'name': 'JavaScript find() method',
'category': 'javascript'
}
And we have an array of blog items like this:
const blogs = [
{
'name': 'CSS :focus-within',
'category': 'css'
},
{
'name': 'JavaScript is awesome',
'category': 'javascript'
},
{
'name': 'Angular 10 routing',
'category': 'angular'
}
];
Now we can use find()
to get the first blog item that is related to our one (javascript
based).
const related = blogs.find(item => item.category === blog.category);
console.log(related);
// { name: 'JavaScript is awesome', category: 'javascript' }
There you go, an example of how to use the find find()
method in JavaScript.
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