Iterables #
An object is deemed iterable if it has an implementation for the Symbol.iterator
property.
Some built-in types like Array
, Map
, Set
, String
, Int32Array
, Uint32Array
, etc. have their Symbol.iterator
property already implemented.
Symbol.iterator
function on an object is responsible for returning the list of values to iterate on.
for..of
statements #
for..of
loops over an iterable object, invoking the Symbol.iterator
property on the object.
Here is a simple for..of
loop on an array:
let someArray = [1, "string", false];
for (let entry of someArray) {
console.log(entry); // 1, "string", false
}
for..of
vs. for..in
statements #
Both for..of
and for..in
statements iterate over lists; the values iterated on are different though, for..in
returns a list of keys on the object being iterated, whereas for..of
returns a list of values of the numeric properties of the object being iterated.
Here is an example that demonstrates this distinction:
let list = [4, 5, 6];
for (let i in list) {
console.log(i); // "0", "1", "2",
}
for (let i of list) {
console.log(i); // "4", "5", "6"
}
Another distinction is that for..in
operates on any object; it serves as a way to inspect properties on this object.
for..of
on the other hand, is mainly interested in values of iterable objects. Built-in objects like Map
and Set
implement Symbol.iterator
property allowing access to stored values.
let pets = new Set(["Cat", "Dog", "Hamster"]);
pets["species"] = "mammals";
for (let pet in pets) {
console.log(pet); // "species"
}
for (let pet of pets) {
console.log(pet); // "Cat", "Dog", "Hamster"
}
Code generation #
Targeting ES5 and ES3 #
When targeting an ES5 or ES3-compliant engine, iterators are only allowed on values of Array
type.
It is an error to use for..of
loops on non-Array values, even if these non-Array values implement the Symbol.iterator
property.
The compiler will generate a simple for
loop for a for..of
loop, for instance:
let numbers = [1, 2, 3];
for (let num of numbers) {
console.log(num);
}
will be generated as:
var numbers = [1, 2, 3];
for (var _i = 0; _i < numbers.length; _i++) {
var num = numbers[_i];
console.log(num);
}
Targeting ECMAScript 2015 and higher #
When targeting an ECMAScipt 2015-compliant engine, the compiler will generate for..of
loops to target the built-in iterator implementation in the engine.