revision:
The indexOf() method returns the first index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present.
indexOf(searchElement) indexOf(searchElement, fromIndex)
Parameters:
searchElement : element to locate in the array.
fromIndex : optional. Zero-based index at which to start searching, converted to an integer. Negative index counts back from the end of the array — if "fromIndex < 0", "fromIndex + array.length" is used. Note, the array is still searched from front to back in this case. If "fromIndex < -array.length" or "fromIndex is omitted", 0 is used, causing the entire array to be searched. If "fromIndex >= array.length", the array is not searched and -1 is returned.
const beasts = ['ant', 'bison', 'camel', 'duck', 'bison']; console.log(beasts.indexOf('bison')); // Expected output: 1 // Start from index 2 console.log(beasts.indexOf('bison', 2)); // Expected output: 4 console.log(beasts.indexOf('giraffe')); // Expected output: -1
The indexOf() method returns the position of the first occurrence of a value in a string. The indexOf() method returns -1 if the value is not found. The indexOf() method is case sensitive.
string.indexOf(searchvalue, start)
Parameters:
searchvalue : required; the string to search for.
start : optional. The position to start from (default is 0).
<p>indexOf() returns the position of the first occurrence of a value in a string.</p> <p>Find "welcome":</p> <p id="demo"></p> <script> let text = "Hello world, welcome to the universe."; let result = text.indexOf("welcome"); document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = result; </script>
example: using indexOf()
<div> <p id="index-A"></p> <p id="index-1"></p> <p id="index-2"></p> <p id="index-3"></p> <p id="index-4"></p> <p id="index-5"></p> <p id="index-6"></p> </div> <script> const array = [2, 9, 9]; console.log(array.indexOf(2)); // 0 console.log(array.indexOf(7)); // -1 console.log(array.indexOf(7)); // -1 console.log(array.indexOf(9, 2)); // 2 console.log(array.indexOf(2, -1)); // -1 console.log(array.indexOf(2, -3)); // 0 document.getElementById("index-A").innerHTML = "array : " + array; document.getElementById("index-1").innerHTML = "index of 2 : " + array.indexOf(2); document.getElementById("index-2").innerHTML = "index of 7 : " +array.indexOf(7); document.getElementById("index-3").innerHTML = "index of -7 : " + array.indexOf(-7); document.getElementById("index-4").innerHTML = "index of 9, starting 2 : " + array.indexOf(9, 2); document.getElementById("index-5").innerHTML = "index of 9, starting -1 : " + array.indexOf(2, -1); document.getElementById("index-6").innerHTML = "index of 9, starting -3 : " + array.indexOf(2, -3); </script>
example: various usages of indexOf()
indexOf() returns the position of the first occurrence of a value in a string:
find "Welcome" :
find "e" :
Find "e", starting at position 5 :
Find "a" :
<div> <p id="index-7"></p> <p class="spec">indexOf() returns the position of the first occurrence of a value in a string:</p> <p class="spec">find "Welcome" : <span style="color: red" id="index-8"></span></p> <p class="spec">find "e" : <span style="color: red" id="index-9"></span></p> <p class="spec">Find "e", starting at position 5 : <span style="color: red" id="index-10"></span></p> <p class="spec">Find "a" : <span style="color: red" id="index-11"></span></p> /div> <script> let text = "Hello world, welcome to the universe."; document.getElementById("index-7").innerHTML = text; let result = text.indexOf("Welcome"); document.getElementById("index-8").innerHTML = result; document.getElementById("index-9").innerHTML = text.indexOf("e"); document.getElementById("index-10").innerHTML = text.indexOf("e", 5); document.getElementById("index-11").innerHTML = text.indexOf("a", 5); </script>