Baseline Widely available
includes()
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const array1 = [1, 2, 3];
console.log(array1.includes(2));
// Expected output: true
const pets = ["cat", "dog", "bat"];
console.log(pets.includes("cat"));
// Expected output: true
console.log(pets.includes("at"));
// Expected output: false
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arr.includes(searchElement[, fromIndex])忏
searchElement
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fromIndex
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è¦æ¼æ¤é£åä¸éå§æå° searchElement
çä½ç½®ãå¦çºè² æ¸å¼ï¼åèª array.length + fromIndex
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[1, 2, 3].includes(2); // true
[1, 2, 3].includes(4); // false
[1, 2, 3].includes(3, 3); // false
[1, 2, 3].includes(3, -1); // true
[1, 2, NaN].includes(NaN); // true
fromIndex
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妿 fromIndex
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var arr = ["a", "b", "c"];
arr.includes("c", 3); // false
arr.includes("c", 100); // false
Computed index is less than 0
If fromIndex
is negative, the computed index is calculated to be used as a position in the array at which to begin searching for searchElement
. If the computed index is less than 0, the entire array will be searched.
// array length is 3
// fromIndex is -100
// computed index is 3 + (-100) = -97
var arr = ["a", "b", "c"];
arr.includes("a", -100); // true
arr.includes("b", -100); // true
arr.includes("c", -100); // true
includes()
used as a generic method
includes()
method is intentionally generic. It does not require this
value to be an Array object, so it can be applied to other kinds of objects (e.g. array-like objects). The example below illustrates includes()
method called on the function's arguments object.
(function () {
console.log([].includes.call(arguments, "a")); // true
console.log([].includes.call(arguments, "d")); // false
})("a", "b", "c");
Polyfill
// https://tc39.github.io/ecma262/#sec-array.prototype.includes
if (!Array.prototype.includes) {
Object.defineProperty(Array.prototype, "includes", {
value: function (searchElement, fromIndex) {
if (this == null) {
throw new TypeError('"this" is null or not defined');
}
// 1. Let O be ? ToObject(this value).
var o = Object(this);
// 2. Let len be ? ToLength(? Get(O, "length")).
var len = o.length >>> 0;
// 3. If len is 0, return false.
if (len === 0) {
return false;
}
// 4. Let n be ? ToInteger(fromIndex).
// (If fromIndex is undefined, this step produces the value 0.)
var n = fromIndex | 0;
// 5. If n ⥠0, then
// a. Let k be n.
// 6. Else n < 0,
// a. Let k be len + n.
// b. If k < 0, let k be 0.
var k = Math.max(n >= 0 ? n : len - Math.abs(n), 0);
function sameValueZero(x, y) {
return (
x === y ||
(typeof x === "number" &&
typeof y === "number" &&
isNaN(x) &&
isNaN(y))
);
}
// 7. Repeat, while k < len
while (k < len) {
// a. Let elementK be the result of ? Get(O, ! ToString(k)).
// b. If SameValueZero(searchElement, elementK) is true, return true.
if (sameValueZero(o[k], searchElement)) {
return true;
}
// c. Increase k by 1.
k++;
}
// 8. Return false
return false;
},
});
}
If you need to support truly obsolete JavaScript engines that don't support Object.defineProperty
, it's best not to polyfill Array.prototype
methods at all, as you can't make them non-enumerable.
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