Creates an array of elements split into groups the length of size
. If array
can't be split evenly, the final chunk will be the remaining elements.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to process.[size=1]
(number): The length of each chunk(Array): Returns the new array of chunks.
_.chunk(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], 2); // => [['a', 'b'], ['c', 'd']] _.chunk(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], 3); // => [['a', 'b', 'c'], ['d']]
Creates an array with all falsey values removed. The values false
, null
, 0
, ""
, undefined
, and NaN
are falsey.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to compact.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.compact([0, 1, false, 2, '', 3]); // => [1, 2, 3]
Creates a new array concatenating array
with any additional arrays and/or values.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to concatenate.[values]
(...*): The values to concatenate.(Array): Returns the new concatenated array.
var array = [1]; var other = _.concat(array, 2, [3], [[4]]); console.log(other); // => [1, 2, 3, [4]] console.log(array); // => [1]
Creates an array of array
values not included in the other given arrays using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array.
Note: Unlike _.pullAll
, this method returns a new array.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[values]
(...Array): The values to exclude.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.difference([2, 1], [2, 3]); // => [1]
This method is like _.difference
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element of array
and values
to generate the criterion by which they're compared. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array. The iteratee is invoked with one argument:
(value).
Note: Unlike _.pullAllBy
, this method returns a new array.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[values]
(...Array): The values to exclude.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.differenceBy([2.1, 1.2], [2.3, 3.4], Math.floor); // => [1.2] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.differenceBy([{ 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], [{ 'x': 1 }], 'x'); // => [{ 'x': 2 }]
This method is like _.difference
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of array
to values
. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array. The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
Note: Unlike _.pullAllWith
, this method returns a new array.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[values]
(...Array): The values to exclude.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
var objects = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]; _.differenceWith(objects, [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }], _.isEqual); // => [{ 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]
Creates a slice of array
with n
elements dropped from the beginning.
0.5.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[n=1]
(number): The number of elements to drop.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.drop([1, 2, 3]); // => [2, 3] _.drop([1, 2, 3], 2); // => [3] _.drop([1, 2, 3], 5); // => [] _.drop([1, 2, 3], 0); // => [1, 2, 3]
Creates a slice of array
with n
elements dropped from the end.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[n=1]
(number): The number of elements to drop.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.dropRight([1, 2, 3]); // => [1, 2] _.dropRight([1, 2, 3], 2); // => [1] _.dropRight([1, 2, 3], 5); // => [] _.dropRight([1, 2, 3], 0); // => [1, 2, 3]
Creates a slice of array
excluding elements dropped from the end. Elements are dropped until predicate
returns falsey. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index, array).
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': false } ]; _.dropRightWhile(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['barney'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.dropRightWhile(users, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': false }); // => objects for ['barney', 'fred'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.dropRightWhile(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['barney'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.dropRightWhile(users, 'active'); // => objects for ['barney', 'fred', 'pebbles']
Creates a slice of array
excluding elements dropped from the beginning. Elements are dropped until predicate
returns falsey. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index, array).
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': true } ]; _.dropWhile(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['pebbles'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.dropWhile(users, { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }); // => objects for ['fred', 'pebbles'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.dropWhile(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['pebbles'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.dropWhile(users, 'active'); // => objects for ['barney', 'fred', 'pebbles']
Fills elements of array
with value
from start
up to, but not including, end
.
Note: This method mutates array
.
3.2.0
array
(Array): The array to fill.value
(*): The value to fill array
with.[start=0]
(number): The start position.[end=array.length]
(number): The end position.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = [1, 2, 3]; _.fill(array, 'a'); console.log(array); // => ['a', 'a', 'a'] _.fill(Array(3), 2); // => [2, 2, 2] _.fill([4, 6, 8, 10], '*', 1, 3); // => [4, '*', '*', 10]
This method is like _.find
except that it returns the index of the first element predicate
returns truthy for instead of the element itself.
1.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[fromIndex=0]
(number): The index to search from.(number): Returns the index of the found element, else -1
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': true } ]; _.findIndex(users, function(o) { return o.user == 'barney'; }); // => 0 // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.findIndex(users, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }); // => 1 // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.findIndex(users, ['active', false]); // => 0 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.findIndex(users, 'active'); // => 2
This method is like _.findIndex
except that it iterates over elements of collection
from right to left.
2.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[fromIndex=array.length-1]
(number): The index to search from.(number): Returns the index of the found element, else -1
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': false } ]; _.findLastIndex(users, function(o) { return o.user == 'pebbles'; }); // => 2 // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastIndex(users, { 'user': 'barney', 'active': true }); // => 0 // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastIndex(users, ['active', false]); // => 2 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastIndex(users, 'active'); // => 0
Flattens array
a single level deep.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to flatten.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
_.flatten([1, [2, [3, [4]], 5]]); // => [1, 2, [3, [4]], 5]
Recursively flattens array
.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to flatten.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
_.flattenDeep([1, [2, [3, [4]], 5]]); // => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Recursively flatten array
up to depth
times.
4.4.0
array
(Array): The array to flatten.[depth=1]
(number): The maximum recursion depth.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
var array = [1, [2, [3, [4]], 5]]; _.flattenDepth(array, 1); // => [1, 2, [3, [4]], 5] _.flattenDepth(array, 2); // => [1, 2, 3, [4], 5]
The inverse of _.toPairs
; this method returns an object composed from key-value pairs
.
4.0.0
pairs
(Array): The key-value pairs.(Object): Returns the new object.
_.fromPairs([['a', 1], ['b', 2]]); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
Gets the first element of array
.
0.1.0
_.first
array
(Array): The array to query.(*): Returns the first element of array
.
_.head([1, 2, 3]); // => 1 _.head([]); // => undefined
Gets the index at which the first occurrence of value
is found in array
using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons. If fromIndex
is negative, it's used as the offset from the end of array
.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.value
(*): The value to search for.[fromIndex=0]
(number): The index to search from.(number): Returns the index of the matched value, else -1
.
_.indexOf([1, 2, 1, 2], 2); // => 1 // Search from the `fromIndex`. _.indexOf([1, 2, 1, 2], 2, 2); // => 3
Gets all but the last element of array
.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to query.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.initial([1, 2, 3]); // => [1, 2]
Creates an array of unique values that are included in all given arrays using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array.
0.1.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.(Array): Returns the new array of intersecting values.
_.intersection([2, 1], [2, 3]); // => [2]
This method is like _.intersection
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element of each arrays
to generate the criterion by which they're compared. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array. The iteratee is invoked with one argument:
(value).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of intersecting values.
_.intersectionBy([2.1, 1.2], [2.3, 3.4], Math.floor); // => [2.1] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.intersectionBy([{ 'x': 1 }], [{ 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], 'x'); // => [{ 'x': 1 }]
This method is like _.intersection
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of arrays
. The order and references of result values are determined by the first array. The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of intersecting values.
var objects = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]; var others = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }]; _.intersectionWith(objects, others, _.isEqual); // => [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }]
Converts all elements in array
into a string separated by separator
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to convert.[separator=',']
(string): The element separator.(string): Returns the joined string.
_.join(['a', 'b', 'c'], '~'); // => 'a~b~c'
Gets the last element of array
.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to query.(*): Returns the last element of array
.
_.last([1, 2, 3]); // => 3
This method is like _.indexOf
except that it iterates over elements of array
from right to left.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.value
(*): The value to search for.[fromIndex=array.length-1]
(number): The index to search from.(number): Returns the index of the matched value, else -1
.
_.lastIndexOf([1, 2, 1, 2], 2); // => 3 // Search from the `fromIndex`. _.lastIndexOf([1, 2, 1, 2], 2, 2); // => 1
Gets the element at index n
of array
. If n
is negative, the nth element from the end is returned.
4.11.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[n=0]
(number): The index of the element to return.(*): Returns the nth element of array
.
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']; _.nth(array, 1); // => 'b' _.nth(array, -2); // => 'c';
Removes all given values from array
using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons.
Note: Unlike _.without
, this method mutates array
. Use _.remove
to remove elements from an array by predicate.
2.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.[values]
(...*): The values to remove.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c']; _.pull(array, 'a', 'c'); console.log(array); // => ['b', 'b']
This method is like _.pull
except that it accepts an array of values to remove.
Note: Unlike _.difference
, this method mutates array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.values
(Array): The values to remove.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c']; _.pullAll(array, ['a', 'c']); console.log(array); // => ['b', 'b']
This method is like _.pullAll
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element of array
and values
to generate the criterion by which they're compared. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
Note: Unlike _.differenceBy
, this method mutates array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.values
(Array): The values to remove.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = [{ 'x': 1 }, { 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 3 }, { 'x': 1 }]; _.pullAllBy(array, [{ 'x': 1 }, { 'x': 3 }], 'x'); console.log(array); // => [{ 'x': 2 }]
This method is like _.pullAll
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of array
to values
. The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
Note: Unlike _.differenceWith
, this method mutates array
.
4.6.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.values
(Array): The values to remove.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 3, 'y': 4 }, { 'x': 5, 'y': 6 }]; _.pullAllWith(array, [{ 'x': 3, 'y': 4 }], _.isEqual); console.log(array); // => [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 5, 'y': 6 }]
Removes elements from array
corresponding to indexes
and returns an array of removed elements.
Note: Unlike _.at
, this method mutates array
.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.[indexes]
(...(number|number[])): The indexes of elements to remove.(Array): Returns the new array of removed elements.
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']; var pulled = _.pullAt(array, [1, 3]); console.log(array); // => ['a', 'c'] console.log(pulled); // => ['b', 'd']
Removes all elements from array
that predicate
returns truthy for and returns an array of the removed elements. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index, array).
Note: Unlike _.filter
, this method mutates array
. Use _.pull
to pull elements from an array by value.
2.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new array of removed elements.
var array = [1, 2, 3, 4]; var evens = _.remove(array, function(n) { return n % 2 == 0; }); console.log(array); // => [1, 3] console.log(evens); // => [2, 4]
Reverses array
so that the first element becomes the last, the second element becomes the second to last, and so on.
Note: This method mutates array
and is based on Array#reverse
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to modify.(Array): Returns array
.
var array = [1, 2, 3]; _.reverse(array); // => [3, 2, 1] console.log(array); // => [3, 2, 1]
Creates a slice of array
from start
up to, but not including, end
.
Note: This method is used instead of Array#slice
to ensure dense arrays are returned.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to slice.[start=0]
(number): The start position.[end=array.length]
(number): The end position.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
Uses a binary search to determine the lowest index at which value
should be inserted into array
in order to maintain its sort order.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The sorted array to inspect.value
(*): The value to evaluate.(number): Returns the index at which value
should be inserted into array
.
_.sortedIndex([30, 50], 40); // => 1
This method is like _.sortedIndex
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for value
and each element of array
to compute their sort ranking. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The sorted array to inspect.value
(*): The value to evaluate.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(number): Returns the index at which value
should be inserted into array
.
var objects = [{ 'x': 4 }, { 'x': 5 }]; _.sortedIndexBy(objects, { 'x': 4 }, function(o) { return o.x; }); // => 0 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.sortedIndexBy(objects, { 'x': 4 }, 'x'); // => 0
This method is like _.indexOf
except that it performs a binary search on a sorted array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.value
(*): The value to search for.(number): Returns the index of the matched value, else -1
.
_.sortedIndexOf([4, 5, 5, 5, 6], 5); // => 1
This method is like _.sortedIndex
except that it returns the highest index at which value
should be inserted into array
in order to maintain its sort order.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The sorted array to inspect.value
(*): The value to evaluate.(number): Returns the index at which value
should be inserted into array
.
_.sortedLastIndex([4, 5, 5, 5, 6], 5); // => 4
This method is like _.sortedLastIndex
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for value
and each element of array
to compute their sort ranking. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The sorted array to inspect.value
(*): The value to evaluate.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(number): Returns the index at which value
should be inserted into array
.
var objects = [{ 'x': 4 }, { 'x': 5 }]; _.sortedLastIndexBy(objects, { 'x': 4 }, function(o) { return o.x; }); // => 1 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.sortedLastIndexBy(objects, { 'x': 4 }, 'x'); // => 1
This method is like _.lastIndexOf
except that it performs a binary search on a sorted array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.value
(*): The value to search for.(number): Returns the index of the matched value, else -1
.
_.sortedLastIndexOf([4, 5, 5, 5, 6], 5); // => 3
This method is like _.uniq
except that it's designed and optimized for sorted arrays.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.(Array): Returns the new duplicate free array.
_.sortedUniq([1, 1, 2]); // => [1, 2]
This method is like _.uniqBy
except that it's designed and optimized for sorted arrays.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[iteratee]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new duplicate free array.
_.sortedUniqBy([1.1, 1.2, 2.3, 2.4], Math.floor); // => [1.1, 2.3]
Gets all but the first element of array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.tail([1, 2, 3]); // => [2, 3]
Creates a slice of array
with n
elements taken from the beginning.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[n=1]
(number): The number of elements to take.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.take([1, 2, 3]); // => [1] _.take([1, 2, 3], 2); // => [1, 2] _.take([1, 2, 3], 5); // => [1, 2, 3] _.take([1, 2, 3], 0); // => []
Creates a slice of array
with n
elements taken from the end.
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[n=1]
(number): The number of elements to take.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
_.takeRight([1, 2, 3]); // => [3] _.takeRight([1, 2, 3], 2); // => [2, 3] _.takeRight([1, 2, 3], 5); // => [1, 2, 3] _.takeRight([1, 2, 3], 0); // => []
Creates a slice of array
with elements taken from the end. Elements are taken until predicate
returns falsey. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index, array).
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': false } ]; _.takeRightWhile(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['fred', 'pebbles'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.takeRightWhile(users, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': false }); // => objects for ['pebbles'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.takeRightWhile(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['fred', 'pebbles'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.takeRightWhile(users, 'active'); // => []
Creates a slice of array
with elements taken from the beginning. Elements are taken until predicate
returns falsey. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index, array).
3.0.0
array
(Array): The array to query.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the slice of array
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'active': true } ]; _.takeWhile(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['barney', 'fred'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.takeWhile(users, { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }); // => objects for ['barney'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.takeWhile(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['barney', 'fred'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.takeWhile(users, 'active'); // => []
Creates an array of unique values, in order, from all given arrays using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons.
0.1.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.(Array): Returns the new array of combined values.
_.union([2], [1, 2]); // => [2, 1]
This method is like _.union
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element of each arrays
to generate the criterion by which uniqueness is computed. Result values are chosen from the first array in which the value occurs. The iteratee is invoked with one argument:
(value).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of combined values.
_.unionBy([2.1], [1.2, 2.3], Math.floor); // => [2.1, 1.2] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.unionBy([{ 'x': 1 }], [{ 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], 'x'); // => [{ 'x': 1 }, { 'x': 2 }]
This method is like _.union
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of arrays
. Result values are chosen from the first array in which the value occurs. The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of combined values.
var objects = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]; var others = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }]; _.unionWith(objects, others, _.isEqual); // => [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 1 }]
Creates a duplicate-free version of an array, using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons, in which only the first occurrence of each element is kept. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the array.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.(Array): Returns the new duplicate free array.
_.uniq([2, 1, 2]); // => [2, 1]
This method is like _.uniq
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element in array
to generate the criterion by which uniqueness is computed. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the array. The iteratee is invoked with one argument:
(value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new duplicate free array.
_.uniqBy([2.1, 1.2, 2.3], Math.floor); // => [2.1, 1.2] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.uniqBy([{ 'x': 1 }, { 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], 'x'); // => [{ 'x': 1 }, { 'x': 2 }]
This method is like _.uniq
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of array
. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the array.The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new duplicate free array.
var objects = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }]; _.uniqWith(objects, _.isEqual); // => [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]
This method is like _.zip
except that it accepts an array of grouped elements and creates an array regrouping the elements to their pre-zip configuration.
1.2.0
array
(Array): The array of grouped elements to process.(Array): Returns the new array of regrouped elements.
var zipped = _.zip(['a', 'b'], [1, 2], [true, false]); // => [['a', 1, true], ['b', 2, false]] _.unzip(zipped); // => [['a', 'b'], [1, 2], [true, false]]
This method is like _.unzip
except that it accepts iteratee
to specify how regrouped values should be combined. The iteratee is invoked with the elements of each group: (...group).
3.8.0
array
(Array): The array of grouped elements to process.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function to combine regrouped values.(Array): Returns the new array of regrouped elements.
var zipped = _.zip([1, 2], [10, 20], [100, 200]); // => [[1, 10, 100], [2, 20, 200]] _.unzipWith(zipped, _.add); // => [3, 30, 300]
Creates an array excluding all given values using SameValueZero
for equality comparisons.
Note: Unlike _.pull
, this method returns a new array.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to inspect.[values]
(...*): The values to exclude.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.without([2, 1, 2, 3], 1, 2); // => [3]
Creates an array of unique values that is the symmetric difference of the given arrays. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the arrays.
2.4.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.xor([2, 1], [2, 3]); // => [1, 3]
This method is like _.xor
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element of each arrays
to generate the criterion by which by which they're compared. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the arrays. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
_.xorBy([2.1, 1.2], [2.3, 3.4], Math.floor); // => [1.2, 3.4] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.xorBy([{ 'x': 1 }], [{ 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], 'x'); // => [{ 'x': 2 }]
This method is like _.xor
except that it accepts comparator
which is invoked to compare elements of arrays
. The order of result values is determined by the order they occur in the arrays. The comparator is invoked with two arguments: (arrVal, othVal).
4.0.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to inspect.[comparator]
(Function): The comparator invoked per element.(Array): Returns the new array of filtered values.
var objects = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }, { 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }]; var others = [{ 'x': 1, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 2 }]; _.xorWith(objects, others, _.isEqual); // => [{ 'x': 2, 'y': 1 }, { 'x': 1, 'y': 1 }]
Creates an array of grouped elements, the first of which contains the first elements of the given arrays, the second of which contains the second elements of the given arrays, and so on.
0.1.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to process.(Array): Returns the new array of grouped elements.
_.zip(['a', 'b'], [1, 2], [true, false]); // => [['a', 1, true], ['b', 2, false]]
This method is like _.fromPairs
except that it accepts two arrays, one of property identifiers and one of corresponding values.
0.4.0
[props=[]]
(Array): The property identifiers.[values=[]]
(Array): The property values.(Object): Returns the new object.
_.zipObject(['a', 'b'], [1, 2]); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
This method is like _.zipObject
except that it supports property paths.
4.1.0
[props=[]]
(Array): The property identifiers.[values=[]]
(Array): The property values.(Object): Returns the new object.
_.zipObjectDeep(['a.b[0].c', 'a.b[1].d'], [1, 2]); // => { 'a': { 'b': [{ 'c': 1 }, { 'd': 2 }] } }
This method is like _.zip
except that it accepts iteratee
to specify how grouped values should be combined. The iteratee is invoked with the elements of each group: (...group).
3.8.0
[arrays]
(...Array): The arrays to process.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function to combine grouped values.(Array): Returns the new array of grouped elements.
_.zipWith([1, 2], [10, 20], [100, 200], function(a, b, c) { return a + b + c; }); // => [111, 222]
Creates an object composed of keys generated from the results of running each element of collection
thru iteratee
. The corresponding value of each key is the number of times the key was returned by iteratee
. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
0.5.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee to transform keys.(Object): Returns the composed aggregate object.
_.countBy([6.1, 4.2, 6.3], Math.floor); // => { '4': 1, '6': 2 } // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.countBy(['one', 'two', 'three'], 'length'); // => { '3': 2, '5': 1 }
Checks if predicate
returns truthy for all elements of collection
. Iteration is stopped once predicate
returns falsey. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection).
Note: This method returns true
for empty collections because everything is true of elements of empty collections.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(boolean): Returns true
if all elements pass the predicate check, else false
.
_.every([true, 1, null, 'yes'], Boolean); // => false var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': false } ]; // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.every(users, { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }); // => false // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.every(users, ['active', false]); // => true // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.every(users, 'active'); // => false
Iterates over elements of collection
, returning an array of all elements predicate
returns truthy for. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection).
Note: Unlike _.remove
, this method returns a new array.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new filtered array.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': false } ]; _.filter(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['fred'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.filter(users, { 'age': 36, 'active': true }); // => objects for ['barney'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.filter(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['fred'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.filter(users, 'active'); // => objects for ['barney']
Iterates over elements of collection
, returning the first element predicate
returns truthy for. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection).
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[fromIndex=0]
(number): The index to search from.(*): Returns the matched element, else undefined
.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': false }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'age': 1, 'active': true } ]; _.find(users, function(o) { return o.age < 40; }); // => object for 'barney' // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.find(users, { 'age': 1, 'active': true }); // => object for 'pebbles' // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.find(users, ['active', false]); // => object for 'fred' // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.find(users, 'active'); // => object for 'barney'
This method is like _.find
except that it iterates over elements of collection
from right to left.
2.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[fromIndex=collection.length-1]
(number): The index to search from.(*): Returns the matched element, else undefined
.
_.findLast([1, 2, 3, 4], function(n) { return n % 2 == 1; }); // => 3
Creates a flattened array of values by running each element in collection
thru iteratee
and flattening the mapped results. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection).
4.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
function duplicate(n) { return [n, n]; } _.flatMap([1, 2], duplicate); // => [1, 1, 2, 2]
This method is like _.flatMap
except that it recursively flattens the mapped results.
4.7.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
function duplicate(n) { return [[[n, n]]]; } _.flatMapDeep([1, 2], duplicate); // => [1, 1, 2, 2]
This method is like _.flatMap
except that it recursively flattens the mapped results up to depth
times.
4.7.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[depth=1]
(number): The maximum recursion depth.(Array): Returns the new flattened array.
function duplicate(n) { return [[[n, n]]]; } _.flatMapDepth([1, 2], duplicate, 2); // => [[1, 1], [2, 2]]
Iterates over elements of collection
and invokes iteratee
for each element. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection). Iteratee functions may exit iteration early by explicitly returning false
.
Note: As with other "Collections" methods, objects with a "length" property are iterated like arrays. To avoid this behavior use _.forIn
or _.forOwn
for object iteration.
0.1.0
_.each
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(*): Returns collection
.
_.forEach([1, 2], function(value) { console.log(value); }); // => Logs `1` then `2`. _.forEach({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }, function(value, key) { console.log(key); }); // => Logs 'a' then 'b' (iteration order is not guaranteed).
This method is like _.forEach
except that it iterates over elements of collection
from right to left.
2.0.0
_.eachRight
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(*): Returns collection
.
_.forEachRight([1, 2], function(value) { console.log(value); }); // => Logs `2` then `1`.
Creates an object composed of keys generated from the results of running each element of collection
thru iteratee
. The order of grouped values is determined by the order they occur in collection
. The corresponding value of each key is an array of elements responsible for generating the key. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee to transform keys.(Object): Returns the composed aggregate object.
_.groupBy([6.1, 4.2, 6.3], Math.floor); // => { '4': [4.2], '6': [6.1, 6.3] } // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.groupBy(['one', 'two', 'three'], 'length'); // => { '3': ['one', 'two'], '5': ['three'] }
Checks if value
is in collection
. If collection
is a string, it's checked for a substring of value
, otherwise SameValueZero
is used for equality comparisons. If fromIndex
is negative, it's used as the offset from the end of collection
.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object|string): The collection to inspect.value
(*): The value to search for.[fromIndex=0]
(number): The index to search from.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is found, else false
.
_.includes([1, 2, 3], 1); // => true _.includes([1, 2, 3], 1, 2); // => false _.includes({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }, 1); // => true _.includes('abcd', 'bc'); // => true
Invokes the method at path
of each element in collection
, returning an array of the results of each invoked method. Any additional arguments are provided to each invoked method. If path
is a function, it's invoked for, and this
bound to, each element in collection
.
4.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.path
(Array|Function|string): The path of the method to invoke or the function invoked per iteration.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke each method with.(Array): Returns the array of results.
_.invokeMap([[5, 1, 7], [3, 2, 1]], 'sort'); // => [[1, 5, 7], [1, 2, 3]] _.invokeMap([123, 456], String.prototype.split, ''); // => [['1', '2', '3'], ['4', '5', '6']]
Creates an object composed of keys generated from the results of running each element of collection
thru iteratee
. The corresponding value of each key is the last element responsible for generating the key. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee to transform keys.(Object): Returns the composed aggregate object.
var array = [ { 'dir': 'left', 'code': 97 }, { 'dir': 'right', 'code': 100 } ]; _.keyBy(array, function(o) { return String.fromCharCode(o.code); }); // => { 'a': { 'dir': 'left', 'code': 97 }, 'd': { 'dir': 'right', 'code': 100 } } _.keyBy(array, 'dir'); // => { 'left': { 'dir': 'left', 'code': 97 }, 'right': { 'dir': 'right', 'code': 100 } }
Creates an array of values by running each element in collection
thru iteratee
. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments:
(value, index|key, collection).
Many lodash methods are guarded to work as iteratees for methods like _.every
, _.filter
, _.map
, _.mapValues
, _.reject
, and _.some
.
The guarded methods are:ary
, chunk
, curry
, curryRight
, drop
, dropRight
, every
, fill
, invert
, parseInt
, random
, range
, rangeRight
, repeat
, sampleSize
, slice
, some
, sortBy
, split
, take
, takeRight
, template
, trim
, trimEnd
, trimStart
, and words
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new mapped array.
function square(n) { return n * n; } _.map([4, 8], square); // => [16, 64] _.map({ 'a': 4, 'b': 8 }, square); // => [16, 64] (iteration order is not guaranteed) var users = [ { 'user': 'barney' }, { 'user': 'fred' } ]; // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.map(users, 'user'); // => ['barney', 'fred']
This method is like _.sortBy
except that it allows specifying the sort orders of the iteratees to sort by. If orders
is unspecified, all values are sorted in ascending order. Otherwise, specify an order of "desc" for descending or "asc" for ascending sort order of corresponding values.
4.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratees=[_.identity]]
(Array[]|Function[]|Object[]|string[]): The iteratees to sort by.[orders]
(string[]): The sort orders of iteratees
.(Array): Returns the new sorted array.
var users = [ { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 48 }, { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 34 }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 }, { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36 } ]; // Sort by `user` in ascending order and by `age` in descending order. _.orderBy(users, ['user', 'age'], ['asc', 'desc']); // => objects for [['barney', 36], ['barney', 34], ['fred', 48], ['fred', 40]]
Creates an array of elements split into two groups, the first of which contains elements predicate
returns truthy for, the second of which contains elements predicate
returns falsey for. The predicate is invoked with one argument: (value).
3.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the array of grouped elements.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': true }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'age': 1, 'active': false } ]; _.partition(users, function(o) { return o.active; }); // => objects for [['fred'], ['barney', 'pebbles']] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.partition(users, { 'age': 1, 'active': false }); // => objects for [['pebbles'], ['barney', 'fred']] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.partition(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for [['barney', 'pebbles'], ['fred']] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.partition(users, 'active'); // => objects for [['fred'], ['barney', 'pebbles']]
Reduces collection
to a value which is the accumulated result of running each element in collection
thru iteratee
, where each successive invocation is supplied the return value of the previous. If accumulator
is not given, the first element of collection
is used as the initial value. The iteratee is invoked with four arguments:
(accumulator, value, index|key, collection).
Many lodash methods are guarded to work as iteratees for methods like _.reduce
, _.reduceRight
, and _.transform
.
The guarded methods are:assign
, defaults
, defaultsDeep
, includes
, merge
, orderBy
, and sortBy
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[accumulator]
(*): The initial value.(*): Returns the accumulated value.
_.reduce([1, 2], function(sum, n) { return sum + n; }, 0); // => 3 _.reduce({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 1 }, function(result, value, key) { (result[value] || (result[value] = [])).push(key); return result; }, {}); // => { '1': ['a', 'c'], '2': ['b'] } (iteration order is not guaranteed)
This method is like _.reduce
except that it iterates over elements of collection
from right to left.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[accumulator]
(*): The initial value.(*): Returns the accumulated value.
var array = [[0, 1], [2, 3], [4, 5]]; _.reduceRight(array, function(flattened, other) { return flattened.concat(other); }, []); // => [4, 5, 2, 3, 0, 1]
The opposite of _.filter
; this method returns the elements of collection
that predicate
does not return truthy for.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the new filtered array.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': false }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': true } ]; _.reject(users, function(o) { return !o.active; }); // => objects for ['fred'] // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.reject(users, { 'age': 40, 'active': true }); // => objects for ['barney'] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.reject(users, ['active', false]); // => objects for ['fred'] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.reject(users, 'active'); // => objects for ['barney']
Gets a random element from collection
.
2.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to sample.(*): Returns the random element.
_.sample([1, 2, 3, 4]); // => 2
Gets n
random elements at unique keys from collection
up to the size of collection
.
4.0.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to sample.[n=1]
(number): The number of elements to sample.(Array): Returns the random elements.
_.sampleSize([1, 2, 3], 2); // => [3, 1] _.sampleSize([1, 2, 3], 4); // => [2, 3, 1]
Creates an array of shuffled values, using a version of the Fisher-Yates shuffle.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to shuffle.(Array): Returns the new shuffled array.
_.shuffle([1, 2, 3, 4]); // => [4, 1, 3, 2]
Gets the size of collection
by returning its length for array-like values or the number of own enumerable string keyed properties for objects.
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object|string): The collection to inspect.(number): Returns the collection size.
_.size([1, 2, 3]); // => 3 _.size({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }); // => 2 _.size('pebbles'); // => 7
Checks if predicate
returns truthy for any element of collection
. Iteration is stopped once predicate
returns truthy. The predicate is invoked with three arguments: (value, index|key, collection).
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(boolean): Returns true
if any element passes the predicate check, else false
.
_.some([null, 0, 'yes', false], Boolean); // => true var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'active': false } ]; // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.some(users, { 'user': 'barney', 'active': false }); // => false // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.some(users, ['active', false]); // => true // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.some(users, 'active'); // => true
Creates an array of elements, sorted in ascending order by the results of running each element in a collection thru each iteratee. This method performs a stable sort, that is, it preserves the original sort order of equal elements. The iteratees are invoked with one argument: (value).
0.1.0
collection
(Array|Object): The collection to iterate over.[iteratees=[_.identity]]
(...(Function|Function[])): The iteratees to sort by.(Array): Returns the new sorted array.
var users = [ { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 48 }, { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36 }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 }, { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 34 } ]; _.sortBy(users, [function(o) { return o.user; }]); // => objects for [['barney', 36], ['barney', 34], ['fred', 48], ['fred', 40]] _.sortBy(users, ['user', 'age']); // => objects for [['barney', 34], ['barney', 36], ['fred', 40], ['fred', 48]]
Gets the timestamp of the number of milliseconds that have elapsed since the Unix epoch (1 January 1970 00
:00:00 UTC).
2.4.0
(number): Returns the timestamp.
_.defer(function(stamp) { console.log(_.now() - stamp); }, _.now()); // => Logs the number of milliseconds it took for the deferred invocation.
The opposite of _.before
; this method creates a function that invokes func
once it's called n
or more times.
0.1.0
n
(number): The number of calls before func
is invoked.func
(Function): The function to restrict.(Function): Returns the new restricted function.
var saves = ['profile', 'settings']; var done = _.after(saves.length, function() { console.log('done saving!'); }); _.forEach(saves, function(type) { asyncSave({ 'type': type, 'complete': done }); }); // => Logs 'done saving!' after the two async saves have completed.
Creates a function that invokes func
, with up to n
arguments, ignoring any additional arguments.
3.0.0
func
(Function): The function to cap arguments for.[n=func.length]
(number): The arity cap.(Function): Returns the new capped function.
_.map(['6', '8', '10'], _.ary(parseInt, 1)); // => [6, 8, 10]
Creates a function that invokes func
, with the this
binding and arguments of the created function, while it's called less than n
times. Subsequent calls to the created function return the result of the last func
invocation.
3.0.0
n
(number): The number of calls at which func
is no longer invoked.func
(Function): The function to restrict.(Function): Returns the new restricted function.
jQuery(element).on('click', _.before(5, addContactToList)); // => Allows adding up to 4 contacts to the list.
Creates a function that invokes func
with the this
binding of thisArg
and partials
prepended to the arguments it receives.
The _.bind.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for partially applied arguments.
Note: Unlike native Function#bind
, this method doesn't set the "length" property of bound functions.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to bind.thisArg
(*): The this
binding of func
.[partials]
(...*): The arguments to be partially applied.(Function): Returns the new bound function.
function greet(greeting, punctuation) { return greeting + ' ' + this.user + punctuation; } var object = { 'user': 'fred' }; var bound = _.bind(greet, object, 'hi'); bound('!'); // => 'hi fred!' // Bound with placeholders. var bound = _.bind(greet, object, _, '!'); bound('hi'); // => 'hi fred!'
Creates a function that invokes the method at object[key]
with partials
prepended to the arguments it receives.
This method differs from _.bind
by allowing bound functions to reference methods that may be redefined or don't yet exist. See Peter Michaux's article for more details.
The _.bindKey.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for partially applied arguments.
0.10.0
object
(Object): The object to invoke the method on.key
(string): The key of the method.[partials]
(...*): The arguments to be partially applied.(Function): Returns the new bound function.
var object = { 'user': 'fred', 'greet': function(greeting, punctuation) { return greeting + ' ' + this.user + punctuation; } }; var bound = _.bindKey(object, 'greet', 'hi'); bound('!'); // => 'hi fred!' object.greet = function(greeting, punctuation) { return greeting + 'ya ' + this.user + punctuation; }; bound('!'); // => 'hiya fred!' // Bound with placeholders. var bound = _.bindKey(object, 'greet', _, '!'); bound('hi'); // => 'hiya fred!'
Creates a function that accepts arguments of func
and either invokes func
returning its result, if at least arity
number of arguments have been provided, or returns a function that accepts the remaining func
arguments, and so on. The arity of func
may be specified if func.length
is not sufficient.
The _.curry.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for provided arguments.
Note: This method doesn't set the "length" property of curried functions.
2.0.0
func
(Function): The function to curry.[arity=func.length]
(number): The arity of func
.(Function): Returns the new curried function.
var abc = function(a, b, c) { return [a, b, c]; }; var curried = _.curry(abc); curried(1)(2)(3); // => [1, 2, 3] curried(1, 2)(3); // => [1, 2, 3] curried(1, 2, 3); // => [1, 2, 3] // Curried with placeholders. curried(1)(_, 3)(2); // => [1, 2, 3]
This method is like _.curry
except that arguments are applied to func
in the manner of _.partialRight
instead of _.partial
.
The _.curryRight.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for provided arguments.
Note: This method doesn't set the "length" property of curried functions.
3.0.0
func
(Function): The function to curry.[arity=func.length]
(number): The arity of func
.(Function): Returns the new curried function.
var abc = function(a, b, c) { return [a, b, c]; }; var curried = _.curryRight(abc); curried(3)(2)(1); // => [1, 2, 3] curried(2, 3)(1); // => [1, 2, 3] curried(1, 2, 3); // => [1, 2, 3] // Curried with placeholders. curried(3)(1, _)(2); // => [1, 2, 3]
Creates a debounced function that delays invoking func
until after wait
milliseconds have elapsed since the last time the debounced function was invoked. The debounced function comes with a cancel
method to cancel delayed func
invocations and a flush
method to immediately invoke them. Provide options
to indicate whether func
should be invoked on the leading and/or trailing edge of the wait
timeout. The func
is invoked with the last arguments provided to the debounced function. Subsequent calls to the debounced function return the result of the last func
invocation.
Note: If leading
and trailing
options are true
, func
is invoked on the trailing edge of the timeout only if the debounced function is invoked more than once during the wait
timeout.
If wait
is 0
and leading
is false
, func
invocation is deferred until to the next tick, similar to setTimeout
with a timeout of 0
.
See David Corbacho's article for details over the differences between _.debounce
and _.throttle
.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to debounce.[wait=0]
(number): The number of milliseconds to delay.[options={}]
(Object): The options object.[options.leading=false]
(boolean): Specify invoking on the leading edge of the timeout.[options.maxWait]
(number): The maximum time func
is allowed to be delayed before it's invoked.[options.trailing=true]
(boolean): Specify invoking on the trailing edge of the timeout.(Function): Returns the new debounced function.
// Avoid costly calculations while the window size is in flux. jQuery(window).on('resize', _.debounce(calculateLayout, 150)); // Invoke `sendMail` when clicked, debouncing subsequent calls. jQuery(element).on('click', _.debounce(sendMail, 300, { 'leading': true, 'trailing': false })); // Ensure `batchLog` is invoked once after 1 second of debounced calls. var debounced = _.debounce(batchLog, 250, { 'maxWait': 1000 }); var source = new EventSource('/stream'); jQuery(source).on('message', debounced); // Cancel the trailing debounced invocation. jQuery(window).on('popstate', debounced.cancel);
Defers invoking the func
until the current call stack has cleared. Any additional arguments are provided to func
when it's invoked.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to defer.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke func
with.(number): Returns the timer id.
_.defer(function(text) { console.log(text); }, 'deferred'); // => Logs 'deferred' after one millisecond.
Invokes func
after wait
milliseconds. Any additional arguments are provided to func
when it's invoked.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to delay.wait
(number): The number of milliseconds to delay invocation.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke func
with.(number): Returns the timer id.
_.delay(function(text) { console.log(text); }, 1000, 'later'); // => Logs 'later' after one second.
Creates a function that invokes func
with arguments reversed.
4.0.0
func
(Function): The function to flip arguments for.(Function): Returns the new flipped function.
var flipped = _.flip(function() { return _.toArray(arguments); }); flipped('a', 'b', 'c', 'd'); // => ['d', 'c', 'b', 'a']
Creates a function that memoizes the result of func
. If resolver
is provided, it determines the cache key for storing the result based on the arguments provided to the memoized function. By default, the first argument provided to the memoized function is used as the map cache key. The func
is invoked with the this
binding of the memoized function.
Note: The cache is exposed as the cache
property on the memoized function. Its creation may be customized by replacing the _.memoize.Cache
constructor with one whose instances implement the Map
method interface of clear
, delete
, get
, has
, and set
.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to have its output memoized.[resolver]
(Function): The function to resolve the cache key.(Function): Returns the new memoized function.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }; var other = { 'c': 3, 'd': 4 }; var values = _.memoize(_.values); values(object); // => [1, 2] values(other); // => [3, 4] object.a = 2; values(object); // => [1, 2] // Modify the result cache. values.cache.set(object, ['a', 'b']); values(object); // => ['a', 'b'] // Replace `_.memoize.Cache`. _.memoize.Cache = WeakMap;
Creates a function that negates the result of the predicate func
. The func
predicate is invoked with the this
binding and arguments of the created function.
3.0.0
predicate
(Function): The predicate to negate.(Function): Returns the new negated function.
function isEven(n) { return n % 2 == 0; } _.filter([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], _.negate(isEven)); // => [1, 3, 5]
Creates a function that is restricted to invoking func
once. Repeat calls to the function return the value of the first invocation. The func
is invoked with the this
binding and arguments of the created function.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to restrict.(Function): Returns the new restricted function.
var initialize = _.once(createApplication); initialize(); initialize(); // => `createApplication` is invoked once
Creates a function that invokes func
with its arguments transformed.
4.0.0
func
(Function): The function to wrap.[transforms=[_.identity]]
(...(Function|Function[])): The argument transforms.(Function): Returns the new function.
function doubled(n) { return n * 2; } function square(n) { return n * n; } var func = _.overArgs(function(x, y) { return [x, y]; }, [square, doubled]); func(9, 3); // => [81, 6] func(10, 5); // => [100, 10]
Creates a function that invokes func
with partials
prepended to the arguments it receives. This method is like _.bind
except it does not alter the this
binding.
The _.partial.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for partially applied arguments.
Note: This method doesn't set the "length" property of partially applied functions.
0.2.0
func
(Function): The function to partially apply arguments to.[partials]
(...*): The arguments to be partially applied.(Function): Returns the new partially applied function.
function greet(greeting, name) { return greeting + ' ' + name; } var sayHelloTo = _.partial(greet, 'hello'); sayHelloTo('fred'); // => 'hello fred' // Partially applied with placeholders. var greetFred = _.partial(greet, _, 'fred'); greetFred('hi'); // => 'hi fred'
This method is like _.partial
except that partially applied arguments are appended to the arguments it receives.
The _.partialRight.placeholder
value, which defaults to _
in monolithic builds, may be used as a placeholder for partially applied arguments.
Note: This method doesn't set the "length" property of partially applied functions.
1.0.0
func
(Function): The function to partially apply arguments to.[partials]
(...*): The arguments to be partially applied.(Function): Returns the new partially applied function.
function greet(greeting, name) { return greeting + ' ' + name; } var greetFred = _.partialRight(greet, 'fred'); greetFred('hi'); // => 'hi fred' // Partially applied with placeholders. var sayHelloTo = _.partialRight(greet, 'hello', _); sayHelloTo('fred'); // => 'hello fred'
Creates a function that invokes func
with arguments arranged according to the specified indexes
where the argument value at the first index is provided as the first argument, the argument value at the second index is provided as the second argument, and so on.
3.0.0
func
(Function): The function to rearrange arguments for.indexes
(...(number|number[])): The arranged argument indexes.(Function): Returns the new function.
var rearged = _.rearg(function(a, b, c) { return [a, b, c]; }, [2, 0, 1]); rearged('b', 'c', 'a') // => ['a', 'b', 'c']
Creates a function that invokes func
with the this
binding of the created function and arguments from start
and beyond provided as an array.
Note: This method is based on the rest parameter.
4.0.0
func
(Function): The function to apply a rest parameter to.[start=func.length-1]
(number): The start position of the rest parameter.(Function): Returns the new function.
var say = _.rest(function(what, names) { return what + ' ' + _.initial(names).join(', ') + (_.size(names) > 1 ? ', & ' : '') + _.last(names); }); say('hello', 'fred', 'barney', 'pebbles'); // => 'hello fred, barney, & pebbles'
Creates a function that invokes func
with the this
binding of the create function and an array of arguments much like Function#apply
.
Note: This method is based on the spread operator.
3.2.0
func
(Function): The function to spread arguments over.[start=0]
(number): The start position of the spread.(Function): Returns the new function.
var say = _.spread(function(who, what) { return who + ' says ' + what; }); say(['fred', 'hello']); // => 'fred says hello' var numbers = Promise.all([ Promise.resolve(40), Promise.resolve(36) ]); numbers.then(_.spread(function(x, y) { return x + y; })); // => a Promise of 76
Creates a throttled function that only invokes func
at most once per every wait
milliseconds. The throttled function comes with a cancel
method to cancel delayed func
invocations and a flush
method to immediately invoke them. Provide options
to indicate whether func
should be invoked on the leading and/or trailing edge of the wait
timeout. The func
is invoked with the last arguments provided to the throttled function. Subsequent calls to the throttled function return the result of the last func
invocation.
Note: If leading
and trailing
options are true
, func
is invoked on the trailing edge of the timeout only if the throttled function is invoked more than once during the wait
timeout.
If wait
is 0
and leading
is false
, func
invocation is deferred until to the next tick, similar to setTimeout
with a timeout of 0
.
See David Corbacho's article for details over the differences between _.throttle
and _.debounce
.
0.1.0
func
(Function): The function to throttle.[wait=0]
(number): The number of milliseconds to throttle invocations to.[options={}]
(Object): The options object.[options.leading=true]
(boolean): Specify invoking on the leading edge of the timeout.[options.trailing=true]
(boolean): Specify invoking on the trailing edge of the timeout.(Function): Returns the new throttled function.
// Avoid excessively updating the position while scrolling. jQuery(window).on('scroll', _.throttle(updatePosition, 100)); // Invoke `renewToken` when the click event is fired, but not more than once every 5 minutes. var throttled = _.throttle(renewToken, 300000, { 'trailing': false }); jQuery(element).on('click', throttled); // Cancel the trailing throttled invocation. jQuery(window).on('popstate', throttled.cancel);
Creates a function that accepts up to one argument, ignoring any additional arguments.
4.0.0
func
(Function): The function to cap arguments for.(Function): Returns the new capped function.
_.map(['6', '8', '10'], _.unary(parseInt)); // => [6, 8, 10]
Creates a function that provides value
to wrapper
as its first argument. Any additional arguments provided to the function are appended to those provided to the wrapper
. The wrapper is invoked with the this
binding of the created function.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to wrap.[wrapper=identity]
(Function): The wrapper function.(Function): Returns the new function.
var p = _.wrap(_.escape, function(func, text) { return '<p>' + func(text) + '</p>'; }); p('fred, barney, & pebbles'); // => '<p>fred, barney, & pebbles</p>'
Casts value
as an array if it's not one.
4.4.0
value
(*): The value to inspect.(Array): Returns the cast array.
_.castArray(1); // => [1] _.castArray({ 'a': 1 }); // => [{ 'a': 1 }] _.castArray('abc'); // => ['abc'] _.castArray(null); // => [null] _.castArray(undefined); // => [undefined] _.castArray(); // => [] var array = [1, 2, 3]; console.log(_.castArray(array) === array); // => true
Creates a shallow clone of value
.
Note: This method is loosely based on the structured clone algorithm and supports cloning arrays, array buffers, booleans, date objects, maps, numbers, Object
objects, regexes, sets, strings, symbols, and typed arrays. The own enumerable properties of arguments
objects are cloned as plain objects. An empty object is returned for uncloneable values such as error objects, functions, DOM nodes, and WeakMaps.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to clone.(*): Returns the cloned value.
var objects = [{ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }]; var shallow = _.clone(objects); console.log(shallow[0] === objects[0]); // => true
This method is like _.clone
except that it recursively clones value
.
1.0.0
value
(*): The value to recursively clone.(*): Returns the deep cloned value.
var objects = [{ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }]; var deep = _.cloneDeep(objects); console.log(deep[0] === objects[0]); // => false
This method is like _.cloneWith
except that it recursively clones value
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to recursively clone.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize cloning.(*): Returns the deep cloned value.
function customizer(value) { if (_.isElement(value)) { return value.cloneNode(true); } } var el = _.cloneDeepWith(document.body, customizer); console.log(el === document.body); // => false console.log(el.nodeName); // => 'BODY' console.log(el.childNodes.length); // => 20
This method is like _.clone
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the cloned value. If customizer
returns undefined
, cloning is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with up to four arguments; (value [, index|key, object, stack]).
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to clone.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize cloning.(*): Returns the cloned value.
function customizer(value) { if (_.isElement(value)) { return value.cloneNode(false); } } var el = _.cloneWith(document.body, customizer); console.log(el === document.body); // => false console.log(el.nodeName); // => 'BODY' console.log(el.childNodes.length); // => 0
Checks if object
conforms to source
by invoking the predicate properties of source
with the corresponding property values of object
.
Note: This method is equivalent to _.conforms
when source
is partially applied.
4.14.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.source
(Object): The object of property predicates to conform to.(boolean): Returns true
if object
conforms, else false
.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }; _.conformsTo(object, { 'b': function(n) { return n > 1; } }); // => true _.conformsTo(object, { 'b': function(n) { return n > 2; } }); // => false
Performs a SameValueZero
comparison between two values to determine if they are equivalent.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if the values are equivalent, else false
.
var object = { 'a': 1 }; var other = { 'a': 1 }; _.eq(object, object); // => true _.eq(object, other); // => false _.eq('a', 'a'); // => true _.eq('a', Object('a')); // => false _.eq(NaN, NaN); // => true
Checks if value
is greater than other
.
3.9.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is greater than other
, else false
.
_.gt(3, 1); // => true _.gt(3, 3); // => false _.gt(1, 3); // => false
Checks if value
is greater than or equal to other
.
3.9.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is greater than or equal to other
, else false
.
_.gte(3, 1); // => true _.gte(3, 3); // => true _.gte(1, 3); // => false
Checks if value
is likely an arguments
object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an arguments
object, else false
.
_.isArguments(function() { return arguments; }()); // => true _.isArguments([1, 2, 3]); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as an Array
object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an array, else false
.
_.isArray([1, 2, 3]); // => true _.isArray(document.body.children); // => false _.isArray('abc'); // => false _.isArray(_.noop); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as an ArrayBuffer
object.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an array buffer, else false
.
_.isArrayBuffer(new ArrayBuffer(2)); // => true _.isArrayBuffer(new Array(2)); // => false
Checks if value
is array-like. A value is considered array-like if it's not a function and has a value.length
that's an integer greater than or equal to 0
and less than or equal to Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is array-like, else false
.
_.isArrayLike([1, 2, 3]); // => true _.isArrayLike(document.body.children); // => true _.isArrayLike('abc'); // => true _.isArrayLike(_.noop); // => false
This method is like _.isArrayLike
except that it also checks if value
is an object.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an array-like object, else false
.
_.isArrayLikeObject([1, 2, 3]); // => true _.isArrayLikeObject(document.body.children); // => true _.isArrayLikeObject('abc'); // => false _.isArrayLikeObject(_.noop); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a boolean primitive or object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a boolean, else false
.
_.isBoolean(false); // => true _.isBoolean(null); // => false
Checks if value
is a buffer.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a buffer, else false
.
_.isBuffer(new Buffer(2)); // => true _.isBuffer(new Uint8Array(2)); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Date
object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a date object, else false
.
_.isDate(new Date); // => true _.isDate('Mon April 23 2012'); // => false
Checks if value
is likely a DOM element.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a DOM element, else false
.
_.isElement(document.body); // => true _.isElement('<body>'); // => false
Checks if value
is an empty object, collection, map, or set.
Objects are considered empty if they have no own enumerable string keyed properties.
Array-like values such as arguments
objects, arrays, buffers, strings, or jQuery-like collections are considered empty if they have a length
of 0
. Similarly, maps and sets are considered empty if they have a size
of 0
.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is empty, else false
.
_.isEmpty(null); // => true _.isEmpty(true); // => true _.isEmpty(1); // => true _.isEmpty([1, 2, 3]); // => false _.isEmpty({ 'a': 1 }); // => false
Performs a deep comparison between two values to determine if they are equivalent.
Note: This method supports comparing arrays, array buffers, booleans, date objects, error objects, maps, numbers, Object
objects, regexes, sets, strings, symbols, and typed arrays. Object
objects are compared by their own, not inherited, enumerable properties. Functions and DOM nodes are compared by strict equality, i.e. ===
.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if the values are equivalent, else false
.
var object = { 'a': 1 }; var other = { 'a': 1 }; _.isEqual(object, other); // => true object === other; // => false
This method is like _.isEqual
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to compare values. If customizer
returns undefined
, comparisons are handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with up to six arguments: (objValue, othValue [, index|key, object, other, stack]).
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize comparisons.(boolean): Returns true
if the values are equivalent, else false
.
function isGreeting(value) { return /^h(?:i|ello)$/.test(value); } function customizer(objValue, othValue) { if (isGreeting(objValue) && isGreeting(othValue)) { return true; } } var array = ['hello', 'goodbye']; var other = ['hi', 'goodbye']; _.isEqualWith(array, other, customizer); // => true
Checks if value
is an Error
, EvalError
, RangeError
, ReferenceError
, SyntaxError
, TypeError
, or URIError
object.
3.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an error object, else false
.
_.isError(new Error); // => true _.isError(Error); // => false
Checks if value
is a finite primitive number.
Note: This method is based on Number.isFinite
.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a finite number, else false
.
_.isFinite(3); // => true _.isFinite(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => true _.isFinite(Infinity); // => false _.isFinite('3'); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Function
object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a function, else false
.
_.isFunction(_); // => true _.isFunction(/abc/); // => false
Checks if value
is an integer.
Note: This method is based on Number.isInteger
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an integer, else false
.
_.isInteger(3); // => true _.isInteger(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => false _.isInteger(Infinity); // => false _.isInteger('3'); // => false
Checks if value
is a valid array-like length.
Note: This method is loosely based on ToLength
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a valid length, else false
.
_.isLength(3); // => true _.isLength(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => false _.isLength(Infinity); // => false _.isLength('3'); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Map
object.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a map, else false
.
_.isMap(new Map); // => true _.isMap(new WeakMap); // => false
Performs a partial deep comparison between object
and source
to determine if object
contains equivalent property values.
Note: This method is equivalent to _.matches
when source
is partially applied.
Partial comparisons will match empty array and empty object source
values against any array or object value, respectively. See _.isEqual
for a list of supported value comparisons.
3.0.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.source
(Object): The object of property values to match.(boolean): Returns true
if object
is a match, else false
.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }; _.isMatch(object, { 'b': 2 }); // => true _.isMatch(object, { 'b': 1 }); // => false
This method is like _.isMatch
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to compare values. If customizer
returns undefined
, comparisons are handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with five arguments: (objValue, srcValue, index|key, object, source).
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.source
(Object): The object of property values to match.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize comparisons.(boolean): Returns true
if object
is a match, else false
.
function isGreeting(value) { return /^h(?:i|ello)$/.test(value); } function customizer(objValue, srcValue) { if (isGreeting(objValue) && isGreeting(srcValue)) { return true; } } var object = { 'greeting': 'hello' }; var source = { 'greeting': 'hi' }; _.isMatchWith(object, source, customizer); // => true
Checks if value
is NaN
.
Note: This method is based on Number.isNaN
and is not the same as global isNaN
which returns true
for undefined
and other non-number values.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is NaN
, else false
.
_.isNaN(NaN); // => true _.isNaN(new Number(NaN)); // => true isNaN(undefined); // => true _.isNaN(undefined); // => false
Checks if value
is a pristine native function.
Note: This method can't reliably detect native functions in the presence of the core-js package because core-js circumvents this kind of detection. Despite multiple requests, the core-js maintainer has made it clear: any attempt to fix the detection will be obstructed. As a result, we're left with little choice but to throw an error. Unfortunately, this also affects packages, like babel-polyfill, which rely on core-js.
3.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a native function, else false
.
_.isNative(Array.prototype.push); // => true _.isNative(_); // => false
Checks if value
is null
or undefined
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is nullish, else false
.
_.isNil(null); // => true _.isNil(void 0); // => true _.isNil(NaN); // => false
Checks if value
is null
.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is null
, else false
.
_.isNull(null); // => true _.isNull(void 0); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Number
primitive or object.
Note: To exclude Infinity
, -Infinity
, and NaN
, which are classified as numbers, use the _.isFinite
method.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a number, else false
.
_.isNumber(3); // => true _.isNumber(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => true _.isNumber(Infinity); // => true _.isNumber('3'); // => false
Checks if value
is the language type of Object
. (e.g. arrays, functions, objects, regexes, new Number(0)
, and new String('')
)
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is an object, else false
.
_.isObject({}); // => true _.isObject([1, 2, 3]); // => true _.isObject(_.noop); // => true _.isObject(null); // => false
Checks if value
is object-like. A value is object-like if it's not null
and has a typeof
result of "object".
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is object-like, else false
.
_.isObjectLike({}); // => true _.isObjectLike([1, 2, 3]); // => true _.isObjectLike(_.noop); // => false _.isObjectLike(null); // => false
Checks if value
is a plain object, that is, an object created by the Object
constructor or one with a [[Prototype]]
of null
.
0.8.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a plain object, else false
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; } _.isPlainObject(new Foo); // => false _.isPlainObject([1, 2, 3]); // => false _.isPlainObject({ 'x': 0, 'y': 0 }); // => true _.isPlainObject(Object.create(null)); // => true
Checks if value
is classified as a RegExp
object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a regexp, else false
.
_.isRegExp(/abc/); // => true _.isRegExp('/abc/'); // => false
Checks if value
is a safe integer. An integer is safe if it's an IEEE-754 double precision number which isn't the result of a rounded unsafe integer.
Note: This method is based on Number.isSafeInteger
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a safe integer, else false
.
_.isSafeInteger(3); // => true _.isSafeInteger(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => false _.isSafeInteger(Infinity); // => false _.isSafeInteger('3'); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Set
object.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a set, else false
.
_.isSet(new Set); // => true _.isSet(new WeakSet); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a String
primitive or object.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a string, else false
.
_.isString('abc'); // => true _.isString(1); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a Symbol
primitive or object.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a symbol, else false
.
_.isSymbol(Symbol.iterator); // => true _.isSymbol('abc'); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a typed array.
3.0.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a typed array, else false
.
_.isTypedArray(new Uint8Array); // => true _.isTypedArray([]); // => false
Checks if value
is undefined
.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is undefined
, else false
.
_.isUndefined(void 0); // => true _.isUndefined(null); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a WeakMap
object.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a weak map, else false
.
_.isWeakMap(new WeakMap); // => true _.isWeakMap(new Map); // => false
Checks if value
is classified as a WeakSet
object.
4.3.0
value
(*): The value to check.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is a weak set, else false
.
_.isWeakSet(new WeakSet); // => true _.isWeakSet(new Set); // => false
Checks if value
is less than other
.
3.9.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is less than other
, else false
.
_.lt(1, 3); // => true _.lt(3, 3); // => false _.lt(3, 1); // => false
Checks if value
is less than or equal to other
.
3.9.0
value
(*): The value to compare.other
(*): The other value to compare.(boolean): Returns true
if value
is less than or equal to other
, else false
.
_.lte(1, 3); // => true _.lte(3, 3); // => true _.lte(3, 1); // => false
Converts value
to an array.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(Array): Returns the converted array.
_.toArray({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }); // => [1, 2] _.toArray('abc'); // => ['a', 'b', 'c'] _.toArray(1); // => [] _.toArray(null); // => []
Converts value
to a finite number.
4.12.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(number): Returns the converted number.
_.toFinite(3.2); // => 3.2 _.toFinite(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => 5e-324 _.toFinite(Infinity); // => 1.7976931348623157e+308 _.toFinite('3.2'); // => 3.2
Converts value
to an integer.
Note: This method is loosely based on ToInteger
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(number): Returns the converted integer.
_.toInteger(3.2); // => 3 _.toInteger(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => 0 _.toInteger(Infinity); // => 1.7976931348623157e+308 _.toInteger('3.2'); // => 3
Converts value
to an integer suitable for use as the length of an array-like object.
Note: This method is based on ToLength
.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(number): Returns the converted integer.
_.toLength(3.2); // => 3 _.toLength(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => 0 _.toLength(Infinity); // => 4294967295 _.toLength('3.2'); // => 3
Converts value
to a number.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to process.(number): Returns the number.
_.toNumber(3.2); // => 3.2 _.toNumber(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => 5e-324 _.toNumber(Infinity); // => Infinity _.toNumber('3.2'); // => 3.2
Converts value
to a plain object flattening inherited enumerable string keyed properties of value
to own properties of the plain object.
3.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(Object): Returns the converted plain object.
function Foo() { this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.assign({ 'a': 1 }, new Foo); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 } _.assign({ 'a': 1 }, _.toPlainObject(new Foo)); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3 }
Converts value
to a safe integer. A safe integer can be compared and represented correctly.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(number): Returns the converted integer.
_.toSafeInteger(3.2); // => 3 _.toSafeInteger(Number.MIN_VALUE); // => 0 _.toSafeInteger(Infinity); // => 9007199254740991 _.toSafeInteger('3.2'); // => 3
Converts value
to a string. An empty string is returned for null
and undefined
values. The sign of -0
is preserved.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(string): Returns the converted string.
_.toString(null); // => '' _.toString(-0); // => '-0' _.toString([1, 2, 3]); // => '1,2,3'
Adds two numbers.
3.4.0
augend
(number): The first number in an addition.addend
(number): The second number in an addition.(number): Returns the total.
_.add(6, 4); // => 10
Computes number
rounded up to precision
.
3.10.0
number
(number): The number to round up.[precision=0]
(number): The precision to round up to.(number): Returns the rounded up number.
_.ceil(4.006); // => 5 _.ceil(6.004, 2); // => 6.01 _.ceil(6040, -2); // => 6100
Divide two numbers.
4.7.0
dividend
(number): The first number in a division.divisor
(number): The second number in a division.(number): Returns the quotient.
_.divide(6, 4); // => 1.5
Computes number
rounded down to precision
.
3.10.0
number
(number): The number to round down.[precision=0]
(number): The precision to round down to.(number): Returns the rounded down number.
_.floor(4.006); // => 4 _.floor(0.046, 2); // => 0.04 _.floor(4060, -2); // => 4000
Computes the maximum value of array
. If array
is empty or falsey, undefined
is returned.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.(*): Returns the maximum value.
_.max([4, 2, 8, 6]); // => 8 _.max([]); // => undefined
This method is like _.max
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element in array
to generate the criterion by which the value is ranked. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(*): Returns the maximum value.
var objects = [{ 'n': 1 }, { 'n': 2 }]; _.maxBy(objects, function(o) { return o.n; }); // => { 'n': 2 } // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.maxBy(objects, 'n'); // => { 'n': 2 }
Computes the mean of the values in array
.
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.(number): Returns the mean.
_.mean([4, 2, 8, 6]); // => 5
This method is like _.mean
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element in array
to generate the value to be averaged. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.7.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(number): Returns the mean.
var objects = [{ 'n': 4 }, { 'n': 2 }, { 'n': 8 }, { 'n': 6 }]; _.meanBy(objects, function(o) { return o.n; }); // => 5 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.meanBy(objects, 'n'); // => 5
Computes the minimum value of array
. If array
is empty or falsey, undefined
is returned.
0.1.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.(*): Returns the minimum value.
_.min([4, 2, 8, 6]); // => 2 _.min([]); // => undefined
This method is like _.min
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element in array
to generate the criterion by which the value is ranked. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(*): Returns the minimum value.
var objects = [{ 'n': 1 }, { 'n': 2 }]; _.minBy(objects, function(o) { return o.n; }); // => { 'n': 1 } // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.minBy(objects, 'n'); // => { 'n': 1 }
Multiply two numbers.
4.7.0
multiplier
(number): The first number in a multiplication.multiplicand
(number): The second number in a multiplication.(number): Returns the product.
_.multiply(6, 4); // => 24
Computes number
rounded to precision
.
3.10.0
number
(number): The number to round.[precision=0]
(number): The precision to round to.(number): Returns the rounded number.
_.round(4.006); // => 4 _.round(4.006, 2); // => 4.01 _.round(4060, -2); // => 4100
Subtract two numbers.
4.0.0
minuend
(number): The first number in a subtraction.subtrahend
(number): The second number in a subtraction.(number): Returns the difference.
_.subtract(6, 4); // => 2
Computes the sum of the values in array
.
3.4.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.(number): Returns the sum.
_.sum([4, 2, 8, 6]); // => 20
This method is like _.sum
except that it accepts iteratee
which is invoked for each element in array
to generate the value to be summed. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.0.0
array
(Array): The array to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(number): Returns the sum.
var objects = [{ 'n': 4 }, { 'n': 2 }, { 'n': 8 }, { 'n': 6 }]; _.sumBy(objects, function(o) { return o.n; }); // => 20 // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.sumBy(objects, 'n'); // => 20
Clamps number
within the inclusive lower
and upper
bounds.
4.0.0
number
(number): The number to clamp.[lower]
(number): The lower bound.upper
(number): The upper bound.(number): Returns the clamped number.
_.clamp(-10, -5, 5); // => -5 _.clamp(10, -5, 5); // => 5
Checks if n
is between start
and up to, but not including, end
. If end
is not specified, it's set to start
with start
then set to 0
. If start
is greater than end
the params are swapped to support negative ranges.
3.3.0
number
(number): The number to check.[start=0]
(number): The start of the range.end
(number): The end of the range.(boolean): Returns true
if number
is in the range, else false
.
_.inRange(3, 2, 4); // => true _.inRange(4, 8); // => true _.inRange(4, 2); // => false _.inRange(2, 2); // => false _.inRange(1.2, 2); // => true _.inRange(5.2, 4); // => false _.inRange(-3, -2, -6); // => true
Produces a random number between the inclusive lower
and upper
bounds. If only one argument is provided a number between 0
and the given number is returned. If floating
is true
, or either lower
or upper
are floats, a floating-point number is returned instead of an integer.
Note: JavaScript follows the IEEE-754 standard for resolving floating-point values which can produce unexpected results.
0.7.0
[lower=0]
(number): The lower bound.[upper=1]
(number): The upper bound.[floating]
(boolean): Specify returning a floating-point number.(number): Returns the random number.
_.random(0, 5); // => an integer between 0 and 5 _.random(5); // => also an integer between 0 and 5 _.random(5, true); // => a floating-point number between 0 and 5 _.random(1.2, 5.2); // => a floating-point number between 1.2 and 5.2
Assigns own enumerable string keyed properties of source objects to the destination object. Source objects are applied from left to right. Subsequent sources overwrite property assignments of previous sources.
Note: This method mutates object
and is loosely based on Object.assign
.
0.10.0
object
(Object): The destination object.[sources]
(...Object): The source objects.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; } function Bar() { this.c = 3; } Foo.prototype.b = 2; Bar.prototype.d = 4; _.assign({ 'a': 0 }, new Foo, new Bar); // => { 'a': 1, 'c': 3 }
This method is like _.assign
except that it iterates over own and inherited source properties.
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
_.extend
object
(Object): The destination object.[sources]
(...Object): The source objects.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; } function Bar() { this.c = 3; } Foo.prototype.b = 2; Bar.prototype.d = 4; _.assignIn({ 'a': 0 }, new Foo, new Bar); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3, 'd': 4 }
This method is like _.assignIn
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the assigned values. If customizer
returns undefined
, assignment is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with five arguments: (objValue, srcValue, key, object, source).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
_.extendWith
object
(Object): The destination object.sources
(...Object): The source objects.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize assigned values.(Object): Returns object
.
function customizer(objValue, srcValue) { return _.isUndefined(objValue) ? srcValue : objValue; } var defaults = _.partialRight(_.assignInWith, customizer); defaults({ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }, { 'a': 3 }); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
This method is like _.assign
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the assigned values. If customizer
returns undefined
, assignment is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with five arguments: (objValue, srcValue, key, object, source).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The destination object.sources
(...Object): The source objects.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize assigned values.(Object): Returns object
.
function customizer(objValue, srcValue) { return _.isUndefined(objValue) ? srcValue : objValue; } var defaults = _.partialRight(_.assignWith, customizer); defaults({ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }, { 'a': 3 }); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
Creates an array of values corresponding to paths
of object
.
1.0.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[paths]
(...(string|string[])): The property paths to pick.(Array): Returns the picked values.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }, 4] }; _.at(object, ['a[0].b.c', 'a[1]']); // => [3, 4]
Creates an object that inherits from the prototype
object. If a properties
object is given, its own enumerable string keyed properties are assigned to the created object.
2.3.0
prototype
(Object): The object to inherit from.[properties]
(Object): The properties to assign to the object.(Object): Returns the new object.
function Shape() { this.x = 0; this.y = 0; } function Circle() { Shape.call(this); } Circle.prototype = _.create(Shape.prototype, { 'constructor': Circle }); var circle = new Circle; circle instanceof Circle; // => true circle instanceof Shape; // => true
Assigns own and inherited enumerable string keyed properties of source objects to the destination object for all destination properties that resolve to undefined
. Source objects are applied from left to right. Once a property is set, additional values of the same property are ignored.
Note: This method mutates object
.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The destination object.[sources]
(...Object): The source objects.(Object): Returns object
.
_.defaults({ 'a': 1 }, { 'b': 2 }, { 'a': 3 }); // => { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
This method is like _.defaults
except that it recursively assigns default properties.
Note: This method mutates object
.
3.10.0
object
(Object): The destination object.[sources]
(...Object): The source objects.(Object): Returns object
.
_.defaultsDeep({ 'a': { 'b': 2 } }, { 'a': { 'b': 1, 'c': 3 } }); // => { 'a': { 'b': 2, 'c': 3 } }
This method is like _.find
except that it returns the key of the first element predicate
returns truthy for instead of the element itself.
1.1.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(*): Returns the key of the matched element, else undefined
.
var users = { 'barney': { 'age': 36, 'active': true }, 'fred': { 'age': 40, 'active': false }, 'pebbles': { 'age': 1, 'active': true } }; _.findKey(users, function(o) { return o.age < 40; }); // => 'barney' (iteration order is not guaranteed) // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.findKey(users, { 'age': 1, 'active': true }); // => 'pebbles' // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.findKey(users, ['active', false]); // => 'fred' // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.findKey(users, 'active'); // => 'barney'
This method is like _.findKey
except that it iterates over elements of a collection in the opposite order.
2.0.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(*): Returns the key of the matched element, else undefined
.
var users = { 'barney': { 'age': 36, 'active': true }, 'fred': { 'age': 40, 'active': false }, 'pebbles': { 'age': 1, 'active': true } }; _.findLastKey(users, function(o) { return o.age < 40; }); // => returns 'pebbles' assuming `_.findKey` returns 'barney' // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastKey(users, { 'age': 36, 'active': true }); // => 'barney' // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastKey(users, ['active', false]); // => 'fred' // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.findLastKey(users, 'active'); // => 'pebbles'
Iterates over own and inherited enumerable string keyed properties of an object and invokes iteratee
for each property. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments: (value, key, object). Iteratee functions may exit iteration early by explicitly returning false
.
0.3.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.forIn(new Foo, function(value, key) { console.log(key); }); // => Logs 'a', 'b', then 'c' (iteration order is not guaranteed).
This method is like _.forIn
except that it iterates over properties of object
in the opposite order.
2.0.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.forInRight(new Foo, function(value, key) { console.log(key); }); // => Logs 'c', 'b', then 'a' assuming `_.forIn` logs 'a', 'b', then 'c'.
Iterates over own enumerable string keyed properties of an object and invokes iteratee
for each property. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments: (value, key, object). Iteratee functions may exit iteration early by explicitly returning false
.
0.3.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.forOwn(new Foo, function(value, key) { console.log(key); }); // => Logs 'a' then 'b' (iteration order is not guaranteed).
This method is like _.forOwn
except that it iterates over properties of object
in the opposite order.
2.0.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns object
.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.forOwnRight(new Foo, function(value, key) { console.log(key); }); // => Logs 'b' then 'a' assuming `_.forOwn` logs 'a' then 'b'.
Creates an array of function property names from own enumerable properties of object
.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.(Array): Returns the function names.
function Foo() { this.a = _.constant('a'); this.b = _.constant('b'); } Foo.prototype.c = _.constant('c'); _.functions(new Foo); // => ['a', 'b']
Creates an array of function property names from own and inherited enumerable properties of object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to inspect.(Array): Returns the function names.
function Foo() { this.a = _.constant('a'); this.b = _.constant('b'); } Foo.prototype.c = _.constant('c'); _.functionsIn(new Foo); // => ['a', 'b', 'c']
Gets the value at path
of object
. If the resolved value is undefined
, the defaultValue
is returned in its place.
3.7.0
object
(Object): The object to query.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to get.[defaultValue]
(*): The value returned for undefined
resolved values.(*): Returns the resolved value.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }] }; _.get(object, 'a[0].b.c'); // => 3 _.get(object, ['a', '0', 'b', 'c']); // => 3 _.get(object, 'a.b.c', 'default'); // => 'default'
Checks if path
is a direct property of object
.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to query.path
(Array|string): The path to check.(boolean): Returns true
if path
exists, else false
.
var object = { 'a': { 'b': 2 } }; var other = _.create({ 'a': _.create({ 'b': 2 }) }); _.has(object, 'a'); // => true _.has(object, 'a.b'); // => true _.has(object, ['a', 'b']); // => true _.has(other, 'a'); // => false
Checks if path
is a direct or inherited property of object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to query.path
(Array|string): The path to check.(boolean): Returns true
if path
exists, else false
.
var object = _.create({ 'a': _.create({ 'b': 2 }) }); _.hasIn(object, 'a'); // => true _.hasIn(object, 'a.b'); // => true _.hasIn(object, ['a', 'b']); // => true _.hasIn(object, 'b'); // => false
Creates an object composed of the inverted keys and values of object
. If object
contains duplicate values, subsequent values overwrite property assignments of previous values.
0.7.0
object
(Object): The object to invert.(Object): Returns the new inverted object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 1 }; _.invert(object); // => { '1': 'c', '2': 'b' }
This method is like _.invert
except that the inverted object is generated from the results of running each element of object
thru iteratee
. The corresponding inverted value of each inverted key is an array of keys responsible for generating the inverted value. The iteratee is invoked with one argument: (value).
4.1.0
object
(Object): The object to invert.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The iteratee invoked per element.(Object): Returns the new inverted object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 1 }; _.invertBy(object); // => { '1': ['a', 'c'], '2': ['b'] } _.invertBy(object, function(value) { return 'group' + value; }); // => { 'group1': ['a', 'c'], 'group2': ['b'] }
Invokes the method at path
of object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to query.path
(Array|string): The path of the method to invoke.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke the method with.(*): Returns the result of the invoked method.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': [1, 2, 3, 4] } }] }; _.invoke(object, 'a[0].b.c.slice', 1, 3); // => [2, 3]
Creates an array of the own enumerable property names of object
.
Note: Non-object values are coerced to objects. See the ES spec for more details.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the array of property names.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.keys(new Foo); // => ['a', 'b'] (iteration order is not guaranteed) _.keys('hi'); // => ['0', '1']
Creates an array of the own and inherited enumerable property names of object
.
Note: Non-object values are coerced to objects.
3.0.0
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the array of property names.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.keysIn(new Foo); // => ['a', 'b', 'c'] (iteration order is not guaranteed)
The opposite of _.mapValues
; this method creates an object with the same values as object
and keys generated by running each own enumerable string keyed property of object
thru iteratee
. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments: (value, key, object).
3.8.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns the new mapped object.
_.mapKeys({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }, function(value, key) { return key + value; }); // => { 'a1': 1, 'b2': 2 }
Creates an object with the same keys as object
and values generated by running each own enumerable string keyed property of object
thru iteratee
. The iteratee is invoked with three arguments:
(value, key, object).
2.4.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Object): Returns the new mapped object.
var users = { 'fred': { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 }, 'pebbles': { 'user': 'pebbles', 'age': 1 } }; _.mapValues(users, function(o) { return o.age; }); // => { 'fred': 40, 'pebbles': 1 } (iteration order is not guaranteed) // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.mapValues(users, 'age'); // => { 'fred': 40, 'pebbles': 1 } (iteration order is not guaranteed)
This method is like _.assign
except that it recursively merges own and inherited enumerable string keyed properties of source objects into the destination object. Source properties that resolve to undefined
are skipped if a destination value exists. Array and plain object properties are merged recursively. Other objects and value types are overridden by assignment. Source objects are applied from left to right. Subsequent sources overwrite property assignments of previous sources.
Note: This method mutates object
.
0.5.0
object
(Object): The destination object.[sources]
(...Object): The source objects.(Object): Returns object
.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': 2 }, { 'd': 4 }] }; var other = { 'a': [{ 'c': 3 }, { 'e': 5 }] }; _.merge(object, other); // => { 'a': [{ 'b': 2, 'c': 3 }, { 'd': 4, 'e': 5 }] }
This method is like _.merge
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the merged values of the destination and source properties. If customizer
returns undefined
, merging is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with six arguments:
(objValue, srcValue, key, object, source, stack).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The destination object.sources
(...Object): The source objects.customizer
(Function): The function to customize assigned values.(Object): Returns object
.
function customizer(objValue, srcValue) { if (_.isArray(objValue)) { return objValue.concat(srcValue); } } var object = { 'a': [1], 'b': [2] }; var other = { 'a': [3], 'b': [4] }; _.mergeWith(object, other, customizer); // => { 'a': [1, 3], 'b': [2, 4] }
The opposite of _.pick
; this method creates an object composed of the own and inherited enumerable property paths of object
that are not omitted.
Note: This method is considerably slower than _.pick
.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The source object.[paths]
(...(string|string[])): The property paths to omit.(Object): Returns the new object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': '2', 'c': 3 }; _.omit(object, ['a', 'c']); // => { 'b': '2' }
The opposite of _.pickBy
; this method creates an object composed of the own and inherited enumerable string keyed properties of object
that predicate
doesn't return truthy for. The predicate is invoked with two arguments: (value, key).
4.0.0
object
(Object): The source object.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per property.(Object): Returns the new object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': '2', 'c': 3 }; _.omitBy(object, _.isNumber); // => { 'b': '2' }
Creates an object composed of the picked object
properties.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The source object.[paths]
(...(string|string[])): The property paths to pick.(Object): Returns the new object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': '2', 'c': 3 }; _.pick(object, ['a', 'c']); // => { 'a': 1, 'c': 3 }
Creates an object composed of the object
properties predicate
returns truthy for. The predicate is invoked with two arguments: (value, key).
4.0.0
object
(Object): The source object.[predicate=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per property.(Object): Returns the new object.
var object = { 'a': 1, 'b': '2', 'c': 3 }; _.pickBy(object, _.isNumber); // => { 'a': 1, 'c': 3 }
This method is like _.get
except that if the resolved value is a function it's invoked with the this
binding of its parent object and its result is returned.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to query.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to resolve.[defaultValue]
(*): The value returned for undefined
resolved values.(*): Returns the resolved value.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c1': 3, 'c2': _.constant(4) } }] }; _.result(object, 'a[0].b.c1'); // => 3 _.result(object, 'a[0].b.c2'); // => 4 _.result(object, 'a[0].b.c3', 'default'); // => 'default' _.result(object, 'a[0].b.c3', _.constant('default')); // => 'default'
Sets the value at path
of object
. If a portion of path
doesn't exist, it's created. Arrays are created for missing index properties while objects are created for all other missing properties. Use _.setWith
to customize path
creation.
Note: This method mutates object
.
3.7.0
object
(Object): The object to modify.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to set.value
(*): The value to set.(Object): Returns object
.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }] }; _.set(object, 'a[0].b.c', 4); console.log(object.a[0].b.c); // => 4 _.set(object, ['x', '0', 'y', 'z'], 5); console.log(object.x[0].y.z); // => 5
This method is like _.set
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the objects of path
. If customizer
returns undefined
path creation is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with three arguments: (nsValue, key, nsObject).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to modify.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to set.value
(*): The value to set.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize assigned values.(Object): Returns object
.
var object = {}; _.setWith(object, '[0][1]', 'a', Object); // => { '0': { '1': 'a' } }
Creates an array of own enumerable string keyed-value pairs for object
which can be consumed by _.fromPairs
. If object
is a map or set, its entries are returned.
4.0.0
_.entries
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the key-value pairs.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.toPairs(new Foo); // => [['a', 1], ['b', 2]] (iteration order is not guaranteed)
Creates an array of own and inherited enumerable string keyed-value pairs for object
which can be consumed by _.fromPairs
. If object
is a map or set, its entries are returned.
4.0.0
_.entriesIn
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the key-value pairs.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.toPairsIn(new Foo); // => [['a', 1], ['b', 2], ['c', 3]] (iteration order is not guaranteed)
An alternative to _.reduce
; this method transforms object
to a new accumulator
object which is the result of running each of its own enumerable string keyed properties thru iteratee
, with each invocation potentially mutating the accumulator
object. If accumulator
is not provided, a new object with the same [[Prototype]]
will be used. The iteratee is invoked with four arguments: (accumulator, value, key, object). Iteratee functions may exit iteration early by explicitly returning false
.
1.3.0
object
(Object): The object to iterate over.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.[accumulator]
(*): The custom accumulator value.(*): Returns the accumulated value.
_.transform([2, 3, 4], function(result, n) { result.push(n *= n); return n % 2 == 0; }, []); // => [4, 9] _.transform({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 1 }, function(result, value, key) { (result[value] || (result[value] = [])).push(key); }, {}); // => { '1': ['a', 'c'], '2': ['b'] }
Removes the property at path
of object
.
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.0.0
object
(Object): The object to modify.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to unset.(boolean): Returns true
if the property is deleted, else false
.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 7 } }] }; _.unset(object, 'a[0].b.c'); // => true console.log(object); // => { 'a': [{ 'b': {} }] }; _.unset(object, ['a', '0', 'b', 'c']); // => true console.log(object); // => { 'a': [{ 'b': {} }] };
This method is like _.set
except that accepts updater
to produce the value to set. Use _.updateWith
to customize path
creation. The updater
is invoked with one argument: (value).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.6.0
object
(Object): The object to modify.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to set.updater
(Function): The function to produce the updated value.(Object): Returns object
.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }] }; _.update(object, 'a[0].b.c', function(n) { return n * n; }); console.log(object.a[0].b.c); // => 9 _.update(object, 'x[0].y.z', function(n) { return n ? n + 1 : 0; }); console.log(object.x[0].y.z); // => 0
This method is like _.update
except that it accepts customizer
which is invoked to produce the objects of path
. If customizer
returns undefined
path creation is handled by the method instead. The customizer
is invoked with three arguments: (nsValue, key, nsObject).
Note: This method mutates object
.
4.6.0
object
(Object): The object to modify.path
(Array|string): The path of the property to set.updater
(Function): The function to produce the updated value.[customizer]
(Function): The function to customize assigned values.(Object): Returns object
.
var object = {}; _.updateWith(object, '[0][1]', _.constant('a'), Object); // => { '0': { '1': 'a' } }
Creates an array of the own enumerable string keyed property values of object
.
Note: Non-object values are coerced to objects.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the array of property values.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.values(new Foo); // => [1, 2] (iteration order is not guaranteed) _.values('hi'); // => ['h', 'i']
Creates an array of the own and inherited enumerable string keyed property values of object
.
Note: Non-object values are coerced to objects.
3.0.0
object
(Object): The object to query.(Array): Returns the array of property values.
function Foo() { this.a = 1; this.b = 2; } Foo.prototype.c = 3; _.valuesIn(new Foo); // => [1, 2, 3] (iteration order is not guaranteed)
Creates a lodash
object which wraps value
to enable implicit method chain sequences. Methods that operate on and return arrays, collections, and functions can be chained together. Methods that retrieve a single value or may return a primitive value will automatically end the chain sequence and return the unwrapped value. Otherwise, the value must be unwrapped with _#value
.
Explicit chain sequences, which must be unwrapped with _#value
, may be enabled using _.chain
.
The execution of chained methods is lazy, that is, it's deferred until _#value
is implicitly or explicitly called.
Lazy evaluation allows several methods to support shortcut fusion. Shortcut fusion is an optimization to merge iteratee calls; this avoids the creation of intermediate arrays and can greatly reduce the number of iteratee executions. Sections of a chain sequence qualify for shortcut fusion if the section is applied to an array and iteratees accept only one argument. The heuristic for whether a section qualifies for shortcut fusion is subject to change.
Chaining is supported in custom builds as long as the _#value
method is directly or indirectly included in the build.
In addition to lodash methods, wrappers have Array
and String
methods.
The wrapper Array
methods are:concat
, join
, pop
, push
, shift
, sort
, splice
, and unshift
The wrapper String
methods are:replace
and split
The wrapper methods that support shortcut fusion are:at
, compact
, drop
, dropRight
, dropWhile
, filter
, find
, findLast
, head
, initial
, last
, map
, reject
, reverse
, slice
, tail
, take
, takeRight
, takeRightWhile
, takeWhile
, and toArray
The chainable wrapper methods are:after
, ary
, assign
, assignIn
, assignInWith
, assignWith
, at
, before
, bind
, bindAll
, bindKey
, castArray
, chain
, chunk
, commit
, compact
, concat
, conforms
, constant
, countBy
, create
, curry
, debounce
, defaults
, defaultsDeep
, defer
, delay
, difference
, differenceBy
, differenceWith
, drop
, dropRight
, dropRightWhile
, dropWhile
, extend
, extendWith
, fill
, filter
, flatMap
, flatMapDeep
, flatMapDepth
, flatten
, flattenDeep
, flattenDepth
, flip
, flow
, flowRight
, fromPairs
, functions
, functionsIn
, groupBy
, initial
, intersection
, intersectionBy
, intersectionWith
, invert
, invertBy
, invokeMap
, iteratee
, keyBy
, keys
, keysIn
, map
, mapKeys
, mapValues
, matches
, matchesProperty
, memoize
, merge
, mergeWith
, method
, methodOf
, mixin
, negate
, nthArg
, omit
, omitBy
, once
, orderBy
, over
, overArgs
, overEvery
, overSome
, partial
, partialRight
, partition
, pick
, pickBy
, plant
, property
, propertyOf
, pull
, pullAll
, pullAllBy
, pullAllWith
, pullAt
, push
, range
, rangeRight
, rearg
, reject
, remove
, rest
, reverse
, sampleSize
, set
, setWith
, shuffle
, slice
, sort
, sortBy
, splice
, spread
, tail
, take
, takeRight
, takeRightWhile
, takeWhile
, tap
, throttle
, thru
, toArray
, toPairs
, toPairsIn
, toPath
, toPlainObject
, transform
, unary
, union
, unionBy
, unionWith
, uniq
, uniqBy
, uniqWith
, unset
, unshift
, unzip
, unzipWith
, update
, updateWith
, values
, valuesIn
, without
, wrap
, xor
, xorBy
, xorWith
, zip
, zipObject
, zipObjectDeep
, and zipWith
The wrapper methods that are not chainable by default are:add
, attempt
, camelCase
, capitalize
, ceil
, clamp
, clone
, cloneDeep
, cloneDeepWith
, cloneWith
, conformsTo
, deburr
, defaultTo
, divide
, each
, eachRight
, endsWith
, eq
, escape
, escapeRegExp
, every
, find
, findIndex
, findKey
, findLast
, findLastIndex
, findLastKey
, first
, floor
, forEach
, forEachRight
, forIn
, forInRight
, forOwn
, forOwnRight
, get
, gt
, gte
, has
, hasIn
, head
, identity
, includes
, indexOf
, inRange
, invoke
, isArguments
, isArray
, isArrayBuffer
, isArrayLike
, isArrayLikeObject
, isBoolean
, isBuffer
, isDate
, isElement
, isEmpty
, isEqual
, isEqualWith
, isError
, isFinite
, isFunction
, isInteger
, isLength
, isMap
, isMatch
, isMatchWith
, isNaN
, isNative
, isNil
, isNull
, isNumber
, isObject
, isObjectLike
, isPlainObject
, isRegExp
, isSafeInteger
, isSet
, isString
, isUndefined
, isTypedArray
, isWeakMap
, isWeakSet
, join
, kebabCase
, last
, lastIndexOf
, lowerCase
, lowerFirst
, lt
, lte
, max
, maxBy
, mean
, meanBy
, min
, minBy
, multiply
, noConflict
, noop
, now
, nth
, pad
, padEnd
, padStart
, parseInt
, pop
, random
, reduce
, reduceRight
, repeat
, result
, round
, runInContext
, sample
, shift
, size
, snakeCase
, some
, sortedIndex
, sortedIndexBy
, sortedLastIndex
, sortedLastIndexBy
, startCase
, startsWith
, stubArray
, stubFalse
, stubObject
, stubString
, stubTrue
, subtract
, sum
, sumBy
, template
, times
, toFinite
, toInteger
, toJSON
, toLength
, toLower
, toNumber
, toSafeInteger
, toString
, toUpper
, trim
, trimEnd
, trimStart
, truncate
, unescape
, uniqueId
, upperCase
, upperFirst
, value
, and words
value
(*): The value to wrap in a lodash
instance.(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
function square(n) { return n * n; } var wrapped = _([1, 2, 3]); // Returns an unwrapped value. wrapped.reduce(_.add); // => 6 // Returns a wrapped value. var squares = wrapped.map(square); _.isArray(squares); // => false _.isArray(squares.value()); // => true
Creates a lodash
wrapper instance that wraps value
with explicit method chain sequences enabled. The result of such sequences must be unwrapped with _#value
.
1.3.0
value
(*): The value to wrap.(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36 }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 }, { 'user': 'pebbles', 'age': 1 } ]; var youngest = _ .chain(users) .sortBy('age') .map(function(o) { return o.user + ' is ' + o.age; }) .head() .value(); // => 'pebbles is 1'
This method invokes interceptor
and returns value
. The interceptor is invoked with one argument; (value). The purpose of this method is to "tap into" a method chain sequence in order to modify intermediate results.
0.1.0
value
(*): The value to provide to interceptor
.interceptor
(Function): The function to invoke.(*): Returns value
.
_([1, 2, 3]) .tap(function(array) { // Mutate input array. array.pop(); }) .reverse() .value(); // => [2, 1]
_.tap
except that it returns the result of interceptor
. The purpose of this method is to "pass thru" values replacing intermediate results in a method chain sequence.3.0.0
value
(*): The value to provide to interceptor
.interceptor
(Function): The function to invoke.(*): Returns the result of interceptor
.
_(' abc ') .chain() .trim() .thru(function(value) { return [value]; }) .value(); // => ['abc']
Enables the wrapper to be iterable.
4.0.0
(Object): Returns the wrapper object.
var wrapped = _([1, 2]); wrapped[Symbol.iterator]() === wrapped; // => true Array.from(wrapped); // => [1, 2]
_.at
.1.0.0
[paths]
(...(string|string[])): The property paths to pick.(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
var object = { 'a': [{ 'b': { 'c': 3 } }, 4] }; _(object).at(['a[0].b.c', 'a[1]']).value(); // => [3, 4]
Creates a lodash
wrapper instance with explicit method chain sequences enabled.
0.1.0
(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36 }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 } ]; // A sequence without explicit chaining. _(users).head(); // => { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36 } // A sequence with explicit chaining. _(users) .chain() .head() .pick('user') .value(); // => { 'user': 'barney' }
Executes the chain sequence and returns the wrapped result.
3.2.0
(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
var array = [1, 2]; var wrapped = _(array).push(3); console.log(array); // => [1, 2] wrapped = wrapped.commit(); console.log(array); // => [1, 2, 3] wrapped.last(); // => 3 console.log(array); // => [1, 2, 3]
4.0.0
(Object): Returns the next iterator value.
var wrapped = _([1, 2]); wrapped.next(); // => { 'done': false, 'value': 1 } wrapped.next(); // => { 'done': false, 'value': 2 } wrapped.next(); // => { 'done': true, 'value': undefined }
Creates a clone of the chain sequence planting value
as the wrapped value.
3.2.0
value
(*): The value to plant.(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
function square(n) { return n * n; } var wrapped = _([1, 2]).map(square); var other = wrapped.plant([3, 4]); other.value(); // => [9, 16] wrapped.value(); // => [1, 4]
0.1.0
(Object): Returns the new lodash
wrapper instance.
var array = [1, 2, 3]; _(array).reverse().value() // => [3, 2, 1] console.log(array); // => [3, 2, 1]
Executes the chain sequence to resolve the unwrapped value.
0.1.0
_.prototype.toJSON, _.prototype.valueOf
(*): Returns the resolved unwrapped value.
_([1, 2, 3]).value(); // => [1, 2, 3]
Converts string
to camel case.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the camel cased string.
_.camelCase('Foo Bar'); // => 'fooBar' _.camelCase('--foo-bar--'); // => 'fooBar' _.camelCase('__FOO_BAR__'); // => 'fooBar'
Converts the first character of string
to upper case and the remaining to lower case.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to capitalize.(string): Returns the capitalized string.
_.capitalize('FRED'); // => 'Fred'
Deburrs string
by converting Latin-1 Supplement and Latin Extended-A letters to basic Latin letters and removing combining diacritical marks.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to deburr.(string): Returns the deburred string.
_.deburr('déjà vu'); // => 'deja vu'
Checks if string
ends with the given target string.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to inspect.[target]
(string): The string to search for.[position=string.length]
(number): The position to search up to.(boolean): Returns true
if string
ends with target
, else false
.
_.endsWith('abc', 'c'); // => true _.endsWith('abc', 'b'); // => false _.endsWith('abc', 'b', 2); // => true
Converts the characters "&", "<", ">", '"', and "'" in string
to their corresponding HTML entities.
Note: No other characters are escaped. To escape additional characters use a third-party library like he.
Though the ">" character is escaped for symmetry, characters like ">" and "/" don't need escaping in HTML and have no special meaning unless they're part of a tag or unquoted attribute value. See Mathias Bynens's article (under "semi-related fun fact") for more details.
When working with HTML you should always quote attribute values to reduce XSS vectors.
0.1.0
[string='']
(string): The string to escape.(string): Returns the escaped string.
_.escape('fred, barney, & pebbles'); // => 'fred, barney, & pebbles'
Escapes the RegExp
special characters "^", "$", "", ".", "*", "+", "?", "(", ")", "[", "]", "{", "}", and "|" in string
.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to escape.(string): Returns the escaped string.
_.escapeRegExp('[lodash](https://lodash.com/)'); // => '\[lodash\]\(https://lodash\.com/\)'
Converts string
to kebab case.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the kebab cased string.
_.kebabCase('Foo Bar'); // => 'foo-bar' _.kebabCase('fooBar'); // => 'foo-bar' _.kebabCase('__FOO_BAR__'); // => 'foo-bar'
Converts string
, as space separated words, to lower case.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the lower cased string.
_.lowerCase('--Foo-Bar--'); // => 'foo bar' _.lowerCase('fooBar'); // => 'foo bar' _.lowerCase('__FOO_BAR__'); // => 'foo bar'
Converts the first character of string
to lower case.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the converted string.
_.lowerFirst('Fred'); // => 'fred' _.lowerFirst('FRED'); // => 'fRED'
Pads string
on the left and right sides if it's shorter than length
. Padding characters are truncated if they can't be evenly divided by length
.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to pad.[length=0]
(number): The padding length.[chars=' ']
(string): The string used as padding.(string): Returns the padded string.
_.pad('abc', 8); // => ' abc ' _.pad('abc', 8, '_-'); // => '_-abc_-_' _.pad('abc', 3); // => 'abc'
Pads string
on the right side if it's shorter than length
. Padding characters are truncated if they exceed length
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to pad.[length=0]
(number): The padding length.[chars=' ']
(string): The string used as padding.(string): Returns the padded string.
_.padEnd('abc', 6); // => 'abc ' _.padEnd('abc', 6, '_-'); // => 'abc_-_' _.padEnd('abc', 3); // => 'abc'
Pads string
on the left side if it's shorter than length
. Padding characters are truncated if they exceed length
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to pad.[length=0]
(number): The padding length.[chars=' ']
(string): The string used as padding.(string): Returns the padded string.
_.padStart('abc', 6); // => ' abc' _.padStart('abc', 6, '_-'); // => '_-_abc' _.padStart('abc', 3); // => 'abc'
Converts string
to an integer of the specified radix. If radix
is undefined
or 0
, a radix
of 10
is used unless value
is a hexadecimal, in which case a radix
of 16
is used.
Note: This method aligns with the ES5 implementation of parseInt
.
1.1.0
string
(string): The string to convert.[radix=10]
(number): The radix to interpret value
by.(number): Returns the converted integer.
_.parseInt('08'); // => 8 _.map(['6', '08', '10'], _.parseInt); // => [6, 8, 10]
Repeats the given string n
times.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to repeat.[n=1]
(number): The number of times to repeat the string.(string): Returns the repeated string.
_.repeat('*', 3); // => '***' _.repeat('abc', 2); // => 'abcabc' _.repeat('abc', 0); // => ''
Replaces matches for pattern
in string
with replacement
.
Note: This method is based on String#replace
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to modify.pattern
(RegExp|string): The pattern to replace.replacement
(Function|string): The match replacement.(string): Returns the modified string.
_.replace('Hi Fred', 'Fred', 'Barney'); // => 'Hi Barney'
Converts string
to snake case.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the snake cased string.
_.snakeCase('Foo Bar'); // => 'foo_bar' _.snakeCase('fooBar'); // => 'foo_bar' _.snakeCase('--FOO-BAR--'); // => 'foo_bar'
Splits string
by separator
.
Note: This method is based on String#split
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to split.separator
(RegExp|string): The separator pattern to split by.[limit]
(number): The length to truncate results to.(Array): Returns the string segments.
_.split('a-b-c', '-', 2); // => ['a', 'b']
Converts string
to start case.
3.1.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the start cased string.
_.startCase('--foo-bar--'); // => 'Foo Bar' _.startCase('fooBar'); // => 'Foo Bar' _.startCase('__FOO_BAR__'); // => 'FOO BAR'
Checks if string
starts with the given target string.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to inspect.[target]
(string): The string to search for.[position=0]
(number): The position to search from.(boolean): Returns true
if string
starts with target
, else false
.
_.startsWith('abc', 'a'); // => true _.startsWith('abc', 'b'); // => false _.startsWith('abc', 'b', 1); // => true
Creates a compiled template function that can interpolate data properties in "interpolate" delimiters, HTML-escape interpolated data properties in "escape" delimiters, and execute JavaScript in "evaluate" delimiters. Data properties may be accessed as free variables in the template. If a setting object is given, it takes precedence over _.templateSettings
values.
Note: In the development build _.template
utilizes sourceURLs for easier debugging.
For more information on precompiling templates see lodash's custom builds documentation.
For more information on Chrome extension sandboxes see Chrome's extensions documentation.
0.1.0
[string='']
(string): The template string.[options={}]
(Object): The options object.[options.escape=_.templateSettings.escape]
(RegExp): The HTML "escape" delimiter.[options.evaluate=_.templateSettings.evaluate]
(RegExp): The "evaluate" delimiter.[options.imports=_.templateSettings.imports]
(Object): An object to import into the template as free variables.[options.interpolate=_.templateSettings.interpolate]
(RegExp): The "interpolate" delimiter.[options.sourceURL='lodash.templateSources[n]']
(string): The sourceURL of the compiled template.[options.variable='obj']
(string): The data object variable name.(Function): Returns the compiled template function.
// Use the "interpolate" delimiter to create a compiled template. var compiled = _.template('hello <%= user %>!'); compiled({ 'user': 'fred' }); // => 'hello fred!' // Use the HTML "escape" delimiter to escape data property values. var compiled = _.template('<b><%- value %></b>'); compiled({ 'value': '<script>' }); // => '<b>&lt;script&gt;</b>' // Use the "evaluate" delimiter to execute JavaScript and generate HTML. var compiled = _.template('<% _.forEach(users, function(user) { %><li><%- user %></li><% }); %>'); compiled({ 'users': ['fred', 'barney'] }); // => '<li>fred</li><li>barney</li>' // Use the internal `print` function in "evaluate" delimiters. var compiled = _.template('<% print("hello " + user); %>!'); compiled({ 'user': 'barney' }); // => 'hello barney!' // Use the ES template literal delimiter as an "interpolate" delimiter. // Disable support by replacing the "interpolate" delimiter. var compiled = _.template('hello ${ user }!'); compiled({ 'user': 'pebbles' }); // => 'hello pebbles!' // Use backslashes to treat delimiters as plain text. var compiled = _.template('<%= "\\<%- value %\\>" %>'); compiled({ 'value': 'ignored' }); // => '<%- value %>' // Use the `imports` option to import `jQuery` as `jq`. var text = '<% jq.each(users, function(user) { %><li><%- user %></li><% }); %>'; var compiled = _.template(text, { 'imports': { 'jq': jQuery } }); compiled({ 'users': ['fred', 'barney'] }); // => '<li>fred</li><li>barney</li>' // Use the `sourceURL` option to specify a custom sourceURL for the template. var compiled = _.template('hello <%= user %>!', { 'sourceURL': '/basic/greeting.jst' }); compiled(data); // => Find the source of "greeting.jst" under the Sources tab or Resources panel of the web inspector. // Use the `variable` option to ensure a with-statement isn't used in the compiled template. var compiled = _.template('hi <%= data.user %>!', { 'variable': 'data' }); compiled.source; // => function(data) { // var __t, __p = ''; // __p += 'hi ' + ((__t = ( data.user )) == null ? '' : __t) + '!'; // return __p; // } // Use custom template delimiters. _.templateSettings.interpolate = /{{([\s\S]+?)}}/g; var compiled = _.template('hello {{ user }}!'); compiled({ 'user': 'mustache' }); // => 'hello mustache!' // Use the `source` property to inline compiled templates for meaningful // line numbers in error messages and stack traces. fs.writeFileSync(path.join(process.cwd(), 'jst.js'), '\ var JST = {\ "main": ' + _.template(mainText).source + '\ };\ ');
Converts string
, as a whole, to lower case just like String#toLowerCase.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the lower cased string.
_.toLower('--Foo-Bar--'); // => '--foo-bar--' _.toLower('fooBar'); // => 'foobar' _.toLower('__FOO_BAR__'); // => '__foo_bar__'
Converts string
, as a whole, to upper case just like String#toUpperCase.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the upper cased string.
_.toUpper('--foo-bar--'); // => '--FOO-BAR--' _.toUpper('fooBar'); // => 'FOOBAR' _.toUpper('__foo_bar__'); // => '__FOO_BAR__'
Removes leading and trailing whitespace or specified characters from string
.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to trim.[chars=whitespace]
(string): The characters to trim.(string): Returns the trimmed string.
_.trim(' abc '); // => 'abc' _.trim('-_-abc-_-', '_-'); // => 'abc' _.map([' foo ', ' bar '], _.trim); // => ['foo', 'bar']
Removes trailing whitespace or specified characters from string
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to trim.[chars=whitespace]
(string): The characters to trim.(string): Returns the trimmed string.
_.trimEnd(' abc '); // => ' abc' _.trimEnd('-_-abc-_-', '_-'); // => '-_-abc'
Removes leading whitespace or specified characters from string
.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to trim.[chars=whitespace]
(string): The characters to trim.(string): Returns the trimmed string.
_.trimStart(' abc '); // => 'abc ' _.trimStart('-_-abc-_-', '_-'); // => 'abc-_-'
Truncates string
if it's longer than the given maximum string length. The last characters of the truncated string are replaced with the omission string which defaults to "...".
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to truncate.[options={}]
(Object): The options object.[options.length=30]
(number): The maximum string length.[options.omission='...']
(string): The string to indicate text is omitted.[options.separator]
(RegExp|string): The separator pattern to truncate to.(string): Returns the truncated string.
_.truncate('hi-diddly-ho there, neighborino'); // => 'hi-diddly-ho there, neighbo...' _.truncate('hi-diddly-ho there, neighborino', { 'length': 24, 'separator': ' ' }); // => 'hi-diddly-ho there,...' _.truncate('hi-diddly-ho there, neighborino', { 'length': 24, 'separator': /,? +/ }); // => 'hi-diddly-ho there...' _.truncate('hi-diddly-ho there, neighborino', { 'omission': ' [...]' }); // => 'hi-diddly-ho there, neig [...]'
The inverse of _.escape
; this method converts the HTML entities &amp;
, &lt;
, &gt;
, &quot;
, and &#39;
in string
to their corresponding characters.
Note: No other HTML entities are unescaped. To unescape additional HTML entities use a third-party library like he.
0.6.0
[string='']
(string): The string to unescape.(string): Returns the unescaped string.
_.unescape('fred, barney, & pebbles'); // => 'fred, barney, & pebbles'
Converts string
, as space separated words, to upper case.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the upper cased string.
_.upperCase('--foo-bar'); // => 'FOO BAR' _.upperCase('fooBar'); // => 'FOO BAR' _.upperCase('__foo_bar__'); // => 'FOO BAR'
Converts the first character of string
to upper case.
4.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to convert.(string): Returns the converted string.
_.upperFirst('fred'); // => 'Fred' _.upperFirst('FRED'); // => 'FRED'
Splits string
into an array of its words.
3.0.0
[string='']
(string): The string to inspect.[pattern]
(RegExp|string): The pattern to match words.(Array): Returns the words of string
.
_.words('fred, barney, & pebbles'); // => ['fred', 'barney', 'pebbles'] _.words('fred, barney, & pebbles', /[^, ]+/g); // => ['fred', 'barney', '&', 'pebbles']
Attempts to invoke func
, returning either the result or the caught error object. Any additional arguments are provided to func
when it's invoked.
3.0.0
func
(Function): The function to attempt.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke func
with.(*): Returns the func
result or error object.
// Avoid throwing errors for invalid selectors. var elements = _.attempt(function(selector) { return document.querySelectorAll(selector); }, '>_>'); if (_.isError(elements)) { elements = []; }
Binds methods of an object to the object itself, overwriting the existing method.
Note: This method doesn't set the "length" property of bound functions.
0.1.0
object
(Object): The object to bind and assign the bound methods to.methodNames
(...(string|string[])): The object method names to bind.(Object): Returns object
.
var view = { 'label': 'docs', 'click': function() { console.log('clicked ' + this.label); } }; _.bindAll(view, ['click']); jQuery(element).on('click', view.click); // => Logs 'clicked docs' when clicked.
Creates a function that iterates over pairs
and invokes the corresponding function of the first predicate to return truthy. The predicate-function pairs are invoked with the this
binding and arguments of the created function.
4.0.0
pairs
(Array): The predicate-function pairs.(Function): Returns the new composite function.
var func = _.cond([ [_.matches({ 'a': 1 }), _.constant('matches A')], [_.conforms({ 'b': _.isNumber }), _.constant('matches B')], [_.stubTrue, _.constant('no match')] ]); func({ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }); // => 'matches A' func({ 'a': 0, 'b': 1 }); // => 'matches B' func({ 'a': '1', 'b': '2' }); // => 'no match'
Creates a function that invokes the predicate properties of source
with the corresponding property values of a given object, returning true
if all predicates return truthy, else false
.
Note: The created function is equivalent to _.conformsTo
with source
partially applied.
4.0.0
source
(Object): The object of property predicates to conform to.(Function): Returns the new spec function.
var objects = [ { 'a': 2, 'b': 1 }, { 'a': 1, 'b': 2 } ]; _.filter(objects, _.conforms({ 'b': function(n) { return n > 1; } })); // => [{ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }]
Creates a function that returns value
.
2.4.0
value
(*): The value to return from the new function.(Function): Returns the new constant function.
var objects = _.times(2, _.constant({ 'a': 1 })); console.log(objects); // => [{ 'a': 1 }, { 'a': 1 }] console.log(objects[0] === objects[1]); // => true
Checks value
to determine whether a default value should be returned in its place. The defaultValue
is returned if value
is NaN
, null
, or undefined
.
4.14.0
value
(*): The value to check.defaultValue
(*): The default value.(*): Returns the resolved value.
_.defaultTo(1, 10); // => 1 _.defaultTo(undefined, 10); // => 10
Creates a function that returns the result of invoking the given functions with the this
binding of the created function, where each successive invocation is supplied the return value of the previous.
3.0.0
[funcs]
(...(Function|Function[])): The functions to invoke.(Function): Returns the new composite function.
function square(n) { return n * n; } var addSquare = _.flow([_.add, square]); addSquare(1, 2); // => 9
This method is like _.flow
except that it creates a function that invokes the given functions from right to left.
3.0.0
[funcs]
(...(Function|Function[])): The functions to invoke.(Function): Returns the new composite function.
function square(n) { return n * n; } var addSquare = _.flowRight([square, _.add]); addSquare(1, 2); // => 9
This method returns the first argument it receives.
0.1.0
value
(*): Any value.(*): Returns value
.
var object = { 'a': 1 }; console.log(_.identity(object) === object); // => true
Creates a function that invokes func
with the arguments of the created function. If func
is a property name, the created function returns the property value for a given element. If func
is an array or object, the created function returns true
for elements that contain the equivalent source properties, otherwise it returns false
.
4.0.0
[func=_.identity]
(*): The value to convert to a callback.(Function): Returns the callback.
var users = [ { 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': true }, { 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40, 'active': false } ]; // The `_.matches` iteratee shorthand. _.filter(users, _.iteratee({ 'user': 'barney', 'active': true })); // => [{ 'user': 'barney', 'age': 36, 'active': true }] // The `_.matchesProperty` iteratee shorthand. _.filter(users, _.iteratee(['user', 'fred'])); // => [{ 'user': 'fred', 'age': 40 }] // The `_.property` iteratee shorthand. _.map(users, _.iteratee('user')); // => ['barney', 'fred'] // Create custom iteratee shorthands. _.iteratee = _.wrap(_.iteratee, function(iteratee, func) { return !_.isRegExp(func) ? iteratee(func) : function(string) { return func.test(string); }; }); _.filter(['abc', 'def'], /ef/); // => ['def']
Creates a function that performs a partial deep comparison between a given object and source
, returning true
if the given object has equivalent property values, else false
.
Note: The created function is equivalent to _.isMatch
with source
partially applied.
Partial comparisons will match empty array and empty object source
values against any array or object value, respectively. See _.isEqual
for a list of supported value comparisons.
3.0.0
source
(Object): The object of property values to match.(Function): Returns the new spec function.
var objects = [ { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3 }, { 'a': 4, 'b': 5, 'c': 6 } ]; _.filter(objects, _.matches({ 'a': 4, 'c': 6 })); // => [{ 'a': 4, 'b': 5, 'c': 6 }]
Creates a function that performs a partial deep comparison between the value at path
of a given object to srcValue
, returning true
if the object value is equivalent, else false
.
Note: Partial comparisons will match empty array and empty object srcValue
values against any array or object value, respectively. See _.isEqual
for a list of supported value comparisons.
3.2.0
path
(Array|string): The path of the property to get.srcValue
(*): The value to match.(Function): Returns the new spec function.
var objects = [ { 'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3 }, { 'a': 4, 'b': 5, 'c': 6 } ]; _.find(objects, _.matchesProperty('a', 4)); // => { 'a': 4, 'b': 5, 'c': 6 }
Creates a function that invokes the method at path
of a given object. Any additional arguments are provided to the invoked method.
3.7.0
path
(Array|string): The path of the method to invoke.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke the method with.(Function): Returns the new invoker function.
var objects = [ { 'a': { 'b': _.constant(2) } }, { 'a': { 'b': _.constant(1) } } ]; _.map(objects, _.method('a.b')); // => [2, 1] _.map(objects, _.method(['a', 'b'])); // => [2, 1]
The opposite of _.method
; this method creates a function that invokes the method at a given path of object
. Any additional arguments are provided to the invoked method.
3.7.0
object
(Object): The object to query.[args]
(...*): The arguments to invoke the method with.(Function): Returns the new invoker function.
var array = _.times(3, _.constant), object = { 'a': array, 'b': array, 'c': array }; _.map(['a[2]', 'c[0]'], _.methodOf(object)); // => [2, 0] _.map([['a', '2'], ['c', '0']], _.methodOf(object)); // => [2, 0]
Adds all own enumerable string keyed function properties of a source object to the destination object. If object
is a function, then methods are added to its prototype as well.
Note: Use _.runInContext
to create a pristine lodash
function to avoid conflicts caused by modifying the original.
0.1.0
[object=lodash]
(Function|Object): The destination object.source
(Object): The object of functions to add.[options={}]
(Object): The options object.[options.chain=true]
(boolean): Specify whether mixins are chainable.(*): Returns object
.
function vowels(string) { return _.filter(string, function(v) { return /[aeiou]/i.test(v); }); } _.mixin({ 'vowels': vowels }); _.vowels('fred'); // => ['e'] _('fred').vowels().value(); // => ['e'] _.mixin({ 'vowels': vowels }, { 'chain': false }); _('fred').vowels(); // => ['e']
Reverts the _
variable to its previous value and returns a reference to the lodash
function.
0.1.0
(Function): Returns the lodash
function.
var lodash = _.noConflict();
This method returns undefined
.
2.3.0
_.times(2, _.noop); // => [undefined, undefined]
Creates a function that gets the argument at index n
. If n
is negative, the nth argument from the end is returned.
4.0.0
[n=0]
(number): The index of the argument to return.(Function): Returns the new pass-thru function.
var func = _.nthArg(1); func('a', 'b', 'c', 'd'); // => 'b' var func = _.nthArg(-2); func('a', 'b', 'c', 'd'); // => 'c'
Creates a function that invokes iteratees
with the arguments it receives and returns their results.
4.0.0
[iteratees=[_.identity]]
(...(Function|Function[])): The iteratees to invoke.(Function): Returns the new function.
var func = _.over([Math.max, Math.min]); func(1, 2, 3, 4); // => [4, 1]
Creates a function that checks if all of the predicates
return truthy when invoked with the arguments it receives.
4.0.0
[predicates=[_.identity]]
(...(Function|Function[])): The predicates to check.(Function): Returns the new function.
var func = _.overEvery([Boolean, isFinite]); func('1'); // => true func(null); // => false func(NaN); // => false
Creates a function that checks if any of the predicates
return truthy when invoked with the arguments it receives.
4.0.0
[predicates=[_.identity]]
(...(Function|Function[])): The predicates to check.(Function): Returns the new function.
var func = _.overSome([Boolean, isFinite]); func('1'); // => true func(null); // => true func(NaN); // => false
Creates a function that returns the value at path
of a given object.
2.4.0
path
(Array|string): The path of the property to get.(Function): Returns the new accessor function.
var objects = [ { 'a': { 'b': 2 } }, { 'a': { 'b': 1 } } ]; _.map(objects, _.property('a.b')); // => [2, 1] _.map(_.sortBy(objects, _.property(['a', 'b'])), 'a.b'); // => [1, 2]
The opposite of _.property
; this method creates a function that returns the value at a given path of object
.
3.0.0
object
(Object): The object to query.(Function): Returns the new accessor function.
var array = [0, 1, 2], object = { 'a': array, 'b': array, 'c': array }; _.map(['a[2]', 'c[0]'], _.propertyOf(object)); // => [2, 0] _.map([['a', '2'], ['c', '0']], _.propertyOf(object)); // => [2, 0]
Creates an array of numbers (positive and/or negative) progressing from start
up to, but not including, end
. A step of -1
is used if a negative start
is specified without an end
or step
. If end
is not specified, it's set to start
with start
then set to 0
.
Note: JavaScript follows the IEEE-754 standard for resolving floating-point values which can produce unexpected results.
0.1.0
[start=0]
(number): The start of the range.end
(number): The end of the range.[step=1]
(number): The value to increment or decrement by.(Array): Returns the range of numbers.
_.range(4); // => [0, 1, 2, 3] _.range(-4); // => [0, -1, -2, -3] _.range(1, 5); // => [1, 2, 3, 4] _.range(0, 20, 5); // => [0, 5, 10, 15] _.range(0, -4, -1); // => [0, -1, -2, -3] _.range(1, 4, 0); // => [1, 1, 1] _.range(0); // => []
This method is like _.range
except that it populates values in descending order.
4.0.0
[start=0]
(number): The start of the range.end
(number): The end of the range.[step=1]
(number): The value to increment or decrement by.(Array): Returns the range of numbers.
_.rangeRight(4); // => [3, 2, 1, 0] _.rangeRight(-4); // => [-3, -2, -1, 0] _.rangeRight(1, 5); // => [4, 3, 2, 1] _.rangeRight(0, 20, 5); // => [15, 10, 5, 0] _.rangeRight(0, -4, -1); // => [-3, -2, -1, 0] _.rangeRight(1, 4, 0); // => [1, 1, 1] _.rangeRight(0); // => []
Create a new pristine lodash
function using the context
object.
1.1.0
[context=root]
(Object): The context object.(Function): Returns a new lodash
function.
_.mixin({ 'foo': _.constant('foo') }); var lodash = _.runInContext(); lodash.mixin({ 'bar': lodash.constant('bar') }); _.isFunction(_.foo); // => true _.isFunction(_.bar); // => false lodash.isFunction(lodash.foo); // => false lodash.isFunction(lodash.bar); // => true // Create a suped-up `defer` in Node.js. var defer = _.runInContext({ 'setTimeout': setImmediate }).defer;
This method returns a new empty array.
4.13.0
(Array): Returns the new empty array.
var arrays = _.times(2, _.stubArray); console.log(arrays); // => [[], []] console.log(arrays[0] === arrays[1]); // => false
This method returns false
.
4.13.0
(boolean): Returns false
.
_.times(2, _.stubFalse); // => [false, false]
This method returns a new empty object.
4.13.0
(Object): Returns the new empty object.
var objects = _.times(2, _.stubObject); console.log(objects); // => [{}, {}] console.log(objects[0] === objects[1]); // => false
This method returns an empty string.
4.13.0
(string): Returns the empty string.
_.times(2, _.stubString); // => ['', '']
This method returns true
.
4.13.0
(boolean): Returns true
.
_.times(2, _.stubTrue); // => [true, true]
Invokes the iteratee n
times, returning an array of the results of each invocation. The iteratee is invoked with one argument; (index).
0.1.0
n
(number): The number of times to invoke iteratee
.[iteratee=_.identity]
(Function): The function invoked per iteration.(Array): Returns the array of results.
_.times(3, String); // => ['0', '1', '2'] _.times(4, _.constant(0)); // => [0, 0, 0, 0]
Converts value
to a property path array.
4.0.0
value
(*): The value to convert.(Array): Returns the new property path array.
_.toPath('a.b.c'); // => ['a', 'b', 'c'] _.toPath('a[0].b.c'); // => ['a', '0', 'b', 'c']
Generates a unique ID. If prefix
is given, the ID is appended to it.
0.1.0
[prefix='']
(string): The value to prefix the ID with.(string): Returns the unique ID.
_.uniqueId('contact_'); // => 'contact_104' _.uniqueId(); // => '105'
(string): The semantic version number.
(Object): By default, the template delimiters used by lodash are like those in embedded Ruby (ERB) as well as ES2015 template strings. Change the following template settings to use alternative delimiters.
(RegExp): Used to detect data
property values to be HTML-escaped.
(RegExp): Used to detect code to be evaluated.
(Object): Used to import variables into the compiled template.
(RegExp): Used to detect data
property values to inject.
(string): Used to reference the data object in the template text.
A reference to the lodash
function.
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.10