Question

This question was asked here: Remove empty strings from array while keeping record of indexes with non empty strings

If you'd notice the given as @Baz layed it out;

"I", "am", "", "still", "here", "", "man"

"and from this I wish to produce the following two arrays:"

"I", "am", "still", "here", "man"

All the Answers to this question referred to a form of looping.

My question: Is there a possibility to remove all indexes with empty string without any looping? ... is there any other alternative apart from iterating the array?

May be some regex or some jQuery that we are not aware of?

All answers or suggestions are highly appreciated.

Was it helpful?

Solution

var arr = ["I", "am", "", "still", "here", "", "man"]
// arr = ["I", "am", "", "still", "here", "", "man"]
arr = arr.filter(Boolean)
// arr = ["I", "am", "still", "here", "man"]

filter documentation


// arr = ["I", "am", "", "still", "here", "", "man"]
arr = arr.filter(v=>v!='');
// arr = ["I", "am", "still", "here", "man"]

Arrow functions documentation

OTHER TIPS

var newArray = oldArray.filter(function(v){return v!==''});

PLEASE NOTE: The documentation says:

filter is a JavaScript extension to the ECMA-262 standard; as such it may not be present in other implementations of the standard. You can work around this by inserting the following code at the beginning of your scripts, allowing use of filter in ECMA-262 implementations which do not natively support it. This algorithm is exactly the one specified in ECMA-262, 5th edition, assuming that fn.call evaluates to the original value of Function.prototype.call, and that Array.prototype.push has its original value.

So, to avoid some heartache, you may have to add this code to your script At the beginning.

if (!Array.prototype.filter) {
  Array.prototype.filter = function (fn, context) {
    var i,
        value,
        result = [],
        length;
        if (!this || typeof fn !== 'function' || (fn instanceof RegExp)) {
          throw new TypeError();
        }
        length = this.length;
        for (i = 0; i < length; i++) {
          if (this.hasOwnProperty(i)) {
            value = this[i];
            if (fn.call(context, value, i, this)) {
              result.push(value);
            }
          }
        }
    return result;
  };
}
arr = arr.filter(v => v);

as returned v is implicity converted to truthy

If are using jQuery, grep may be useful:


var arr = [ a, b, c, , e, f, , g, h ];

arr = jQuery.grep(arr, function(n){ return (n); });

arr is now [ a, b, c, d, e, f, g];

You can use lodash's method, it works for string, number and boolean type

_.compact([0, 1, false, 2, '', 3]);
// => [1, 2, 3]

https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.15#compact

i.e we need to take multiple email addresses separated by comma, spaces or newline as below.

    var emails = EmailText.replace(","," ").replace("\n"," ").replace(" ","").split(" ");
    for(var i in emails)
        emails[i] = emails[i].replace(/(\r\n|\n|\r)/gm,"");

    emails.filter(Boolean);
    console.log(emails);
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