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String.prototype.startsWith()

The startsWith() method of String values determines whether this string begins with the characters of a specified string, returning true or false as appropriate.

Try it

Syntax

js
startsWith(searchString)
startsWith(searchString, position)

Parameters

searchString

The characters to be searched for at the start of this string. Cannot be a regex. All values that are not regexes are coerced to strings, so omitting it or passing undefined causes startsWith() to search for the string "undefined", which is rarely what you want.

position Optional

The start position at which searchString is expected to be found (the index of searchString's first character). Defaults to 0.

Return value

true if the given characters are found at the beginning of the string, including when searchString is an empty string; otherwise, false.

Exceptions

TypeError

Thrown if searchString is a regex.

Description

This method lets you determine whether or not a string begins with another string. This method is case-sensitive.

Examples

Using startsWith()

js
const str = "To be, or not to be, that is the question.";

console.log(str.startsWith("To be")); // true
console.log(str.startsWith("not to be")); // false
console.log(str.startsWith("not to be", 10)); // true

Specifications

Browser compatibility

Desktop Mobile Server
Chrome Edge Firefox Opera Safari Chrome Android Firefox for Android Opera Android Safari on IOS Samsung Internet WebView Android Deno Node.js
startsWith 41 12 17 28 9 36 17 24 9 3.0 37 1.0 4.0.0

See also

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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/startsWith