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:
tslet 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:
tslet 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.
tslet 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:
tslet numbers = [1, 2, 3]; for (let num of numbers) { console.log(num); }
will be generated as:
jsvar 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.