for

The for statement creates a loop that consists of three optional expressions, enclosed in parentheses and separated by semicolons, followed by a statement (usually a block statement) to be executed in the loop.

Syntax

for ([initialization]; [condition]; [final-expression])
   statement

initialization An expression (including assignment expressions) or variable declaration evaluated once before the loop begins. Typically used to initialize a counter variable. This expression may optionally declare new variables with var or let keywords. Variables declared with var are not local to the loop, i.e. they are in the same scope the for loop is in. Variables declared with let are local to the statement.

The result of this expression is discarded.

condition An expression to be evaluated before each loop iteration. If this expression evaluates to true, statement is executed. This conditional test is optional. If omitted, the condition always evaluates to true. If the expression evaluates to false, execution skips to the first expression following the for construct.

final-expression An expression to be evaluated at the end of each loop iteration. This occurs before the next evaluation of condition. Generally used to update or increment the counter variable.

statement A statement that is executed as long as the condition evaluates to true. To execute multiple statements within the loop, use a block statement ({ ... }) to group those statements. To execute no statement within the loop, use an empty statement (;).

Examples

Using for

The following for statement starts by declaring the variable i and initializing it to 0. It checks that i is less than nine, performs the two succeeding statements, and increments i by 1 after each pass through the loop.

for (let i = 0; i < 9; i++) {
   console.log(i);
   // more statements
}

Optional for expressions

All three expressions in the head of the for loop are optional.

For example, in the initialization block it is not required to initialize variables:

//var i = 0;for (; i < 9; i++) {
    console.log(i);// more statements}

Like the initialization block, the condition block is also optional. If you are omitting this expression, you must make sure to break the loop in the body in order to not create an infinite loop.

//for (let i = 0; ; i++) {
    console.log(i);if (i > 3) break;// more statements}

You can also omit all three blocks. Again, make sure to use a break statement to end the loop and also modify (increase) a variable, so that the condition for the break statement is true at some point.

//var i = 0;for (;;) {if (i > 3) break;
    console.log(i);
    i++;}

Using for without a statement

The following for cycle calculates the offset position of a node in the final-expression section, and therefore it does not require the use of a statement section, a semicolon is used instead.


//function showOffsetPos(sId) {var nLeft = 0,
        nTop = 0;for (var oItNode = document.getElementById(sId) /* initialization */;
        oItNode /* condition */;
        nLeft += oItNode.offsetLeft, nTop += oItNode.offsetTop, oItNode = oItNode.offsetParent /* final-expression */); /* semicolon */

    console.log("Offset position of '" + sId + "' element:\n left: " + nLeft + 'px;\n top: ' + nTop + 'px;');}/* Example call: */showOffsetPos('content');// Output:// "Offset position of "content" element:// left: 0px;// top: 153px;"

Note: This is one of the few cases in JavaScript where the semicolon is mandatory. Indeed, without the semicolon the line that follows the cycle declaration will be considered a statement.


For... In

for...in

The for...in iterates over all enumerable properties of an object that are keyed by strings (ignoring ones keyed by Symbols), including inherited enumerable properties.

Syntax

for (variable in object)
  statement

variable A different property name is assigned to variable on each iteration.

object Object whose non-Symbol enumerable properties are iterated over.

Description

A for...in loop only iterates over enumerable, non-Symbol properties. Objects created from built-in constructors like Array and Object have inherited non-enumerable properties from Object.prototype and String.prototype, such as String's indexOf() method or Object's toString() method. The loop will iterate over all enumerable properties of the object itself and those the object inherits from its prototype chain (properties of nearer prototypes take precedence over those of prototypes further away from the object in its prototype chain).

Deleted, added, or modified properties

A for...in loop iterates over the properties of an object in an arbitrary order (see the delete operator for more on why one cannot depend on the seeming orderliness of iteration, at least in a cross-browser setting).

If a property is modified in one iteration and then visited at a later time, its value in the loop is its value at that later time. A property that is deleted before it has been visited will not be visited later. Properties added to the object over which iteration is occurring may either be visited or omitted from iteration.

In general, it is best not to add, modify, or remove properties from the object during iteration, other than the property currently being visited. There is no guarantee whether an added property will be visited, whether a modified property (other than the current one) will be visited before or after it is modified, or whether a deleted property will be visited before it is deleted.

Array iteration and for...in

Note: for...in should not be used to iterate over an Array where the index order is important.

Array indexes are just enumerable properties with integer names and are otherwise identical to general object properties. There is no guarantee that for...in will return the indexes in any particular order. The for...in loop statement will return all enumerable properties, including those with non-integer names and those that are inherited.

Because the order of iteration is implementation-dependent, iterating over an array may not visit elements in a consistent order. Therefore, it is better to use a for loop with a numeric index (or Array.prototype.forEach() or the for...of loop) when iterating over arrays where the order of access is important.

Iterating over own properties only

If you only want to consider properties attached to the object itself, and not its prototypes, use getOwnPropertyNames() or perform a hasOwnProperty() check (propertyIsEnumerable() can also be used). Alternatively, if you know there won't be any outside code interference, you can extend built-in prototypes with a check method.

Why Use for...in?

Given that for...in is built for iterating object properties, not recommended for use with arrays, and options like Array.prototype.forEach() and for...of exist, what might be the use of for...in at all?

It may be most practically used for debugging purposes, being an easy way to check the properties of an object (by outputting to the console or otherwise). Although arrays are often more practical for storing data, in situations where a key-value pair is preferred for working with data (with properties acting as the "key"), there may be instances where you want to check if any of those keys hold a particular value.

Examples

Using for...in

The for...in loop below iterates over all of the object's enumerable, non-Symbol properties and logs a string of the property names and their values.

//var obj = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };for (const prop in obj) {
    console.log(`obj.${prop} = ${obj[prop]}`);}// Output:// "obj.a = 1"// "obj.b = 2"// "obj.c = 3"

Iterating own properties

The following function illustrates the use of hasOwnProperty(): the inherited properties are not displayed.

//var triangle = { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3 };function ColoredTriangle() {this.color = 'red';}ColoredTriangle.prototype = triangle;var obj = new ColoredTriangle();for (const prop in obj) {if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
        console.log(`obj.${prop} = ${obj[prop]}`);}}// Output:// "obj.color = red"

For await Of

for await...of

The for await...of creates a loop iterating over async iterable objects as well as on sync iterables, including: built-in String, Array, Array-like objects (e.g., arguments or NodeList), TypedArray, Map, Set, and user-defined async/sync iterables. It invokes a custom iteration hook with statements to be executed for the value of each distinct property of the object. This statement can only be used inside an async function.

Note: for await...of doesn't work with async iterators that are not async iterables.

Syntax

for await (variable of iterable) {
  statement
}

variable On each iteration a value of a different property is assigned to variable. variable may be declared with const, let, or var.

iterable Object whose iterable properties are to be iterated over.

Examples

Iterating over async iterables

You can also iterate over an object that explicitly implements async iterable protocol:

//const asyncIterable = {[Symbol.asyncIterator]() {return {i: 0,next() {if (this.i < 3) {return Promise.resolve({ value: this.i++, done: false });}return Promise.resolve({ done: true });}};}};(async function () {for await (let num of asyncIterable) {
        console.log(num);}})();// 0// 1// 2

Iterating over async generators

Since the return values of async generators conform to the async iterable protocol, they can be looped using for await...of.

//async function* asyncGenerator() {let i = 0;while (i < 3) {yield i++;}}(async function () {for await (let num of asyncGenerator()) {
        console.log(num);}})();// 0// 1// 2

For a more concrete example of iterating over an async generator using for await...of, consider iterating over data from an API.

This example first creates an async iterable for a stream of data, then uses it to find the size of the response from the API.

//async function* streamAsyncIterable(stream) {const reader = stream.getReader();try {while (true) {const { done, value } = await reader.read();if (done) {return;}yield value;}} finally {
        reader.releaseLock();}}// Fetches data from url and calculates response size using the async generator.async function getResponseSize(url) {const response = await fetch(url);// Will hold the size of the response, in bytes.let responseSize = 0;// The for-await-of loop. Async iterates over each portion of the response.for await (const chunk of streamAsyncIterable(response.body)) {// Incrementing the total response length.
        responseSize += chunk.length;}

    console.log(`Response Size: ${responseSize} bytes`);// expected output: "Response Size: 1071472"return responseSize;}getResponseSize('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/photos');

Iterating over sync iterables and generators

for await...of loop also consumes sync iterables and generators. In that case it internally awaits emitted values before assign them to the loop control variable.


//function* generator() {yield 0;yield 1;yield Promise.resolve(2);yield Promise.resolve(3);yield 4;}(async function () {for await (let num of generator()) {
        console.log(num);}})();// 0// 1// 2// 3// 4// compare with for-of loop:for (let numOrPromise of generator()) {
    console.log(numOrPromise);}// 0// 1// Promise { 2 }// Promise { 3 }// 4

Note: Be aware of yielding rejected promises from sync generator. In such case for await...of throws when consuming rejected promise and DOESN'T CALL finally blocks within that generator. This can be undesirable if you need to free some allocated resources with try/finally.


//function* generatorWithRejectedPromises() {try {yield 0;yield 1;yield Promise.resolve(2);yield Promise.reject(3);yield 4;throw 5;} finally {
        console.log('called finally');}}(async function () {try {for await (let num of generatorWithRejectedPromises()) {
            console.log(num);}} catch (e) {
        console.log('caught', e);}})();// 0// 1// 2// caught 3// compare with for-of loop:try {for (let numOrPromise of generatorWithRejectedPromises()) {
        console.log(numOrPromise);}} catch (e) {
    console.log('caught', e);}// 0// 1// Promise { 2 }// Promise { <rejected> 3 }// 4// caught 5// called finally

To make finally blocks of a sync generator to be always called use appropriate form of the loop, for await...of for the async generator and for...of for the sync one and await yielded promises explicitly inside the loop.

//(async function () {try {for (let numOrPromise of generatorWithRejectedPromises()) {
            console.log(await numOrPromise);}} catch (e) {
        console.log('caught', e);}})();// 0// 1// 2// caught 3// called finally