Array.prototype.findLast()
The findLast()
method of Array
instances iterates the array in reverse order and returns the value of the first element that satisfies the provided testing function. If no elements satisfy the testing function, undefined
is returned.
If you need to find:
- the first element that matches, use
find()
.
- the index of the last matching element in the array, use
findLastIndex()
.
- the index of a value, use
indexOf()
. (It's similar to findIndex()
, but checks each element for equality with the value instead of using a testing function.)
- whether a value exists in an array, use
includes()
. Again, it checks each element for equality with the value instead of using a testing function.
- if any element satisfies the provided testing function, use
some()
.
Syntax
findLast(callbackFn)
findLast(callbackFn, thisArg)
Parameters
-
callbackFn
-
A function to execute for each element in the array. It should return a truthy value to indicate a matching element has been found, and a falsy value otherwise. The function is called with the following arguments:
-
element
-
The current element being processed in the array.
-
index
-
The index of the current element being processed in the array.
-
array
-
The array findLast()
was called upon.
thisArg
Optional
-
A value to use as this
when executing callbackFn
. See iterative methods.
Return value
The last (highest-index) element in the array that satisfies the provided testing function; undefined
if no matching element is found.
Description
The findLast()
method is an iterative method. It calls a provided callbackFn
function once for each element in an array in descending-index order, until callbackFn
returns a truthy value. findLast()
then returns that element and stops iterating through the array. If callbackFn
never returns a truthy value, findLast()
returns undefined
. Read the iterative methods section for more information about how these methods work in general.
callbackFn
is invoked for every index of the array, not just those with assigned values. Empty slots in sparse arrays behave the same as undefined
.
The findLast()
method is generic. It only expects the this
value to have a length
property and integer-keyed properties.
Find last object in an array matching on element properties
This example shows how you might create a test based on the properties of array elements.
const inventory = [
{ name: "apples", quantity: 2 },
{ name: "bananas", quantity: 0 },
{ name: "fish", quantity: 1 },
{ name: "cherries", quantity: 5 },
];
function isNotEnough(item) {
return item.quantity < 2;
}
console.log(inventory.findLast(isNotEnough));
Using arrow function and destructuring
The previous example might be written using an arrow function and object destructuring:
const inventory = [
{ name: "apples", quantity: 2 },
{ name: "bananas", quantity: 0 },
{ name: "fish", quantity: 1 },
{ name: "cherries", quantity: 5 },
];
const result = inventory.findLast(({ quantity }) => quantity < 2);
console.log(result);
Find the last prime number in an array
The following example returns the last element in the array that is a prime number, or undefined
if there is no prime number.
function isPrime(element) {
if (element % 2 === 0 || element < 2) {
return false;
}
for (let factor = 3; factor <= Math.sqrt(element); factor += 2) {
if (element % factor === 0) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
console.log([4, 6, 8, 12].findLast(isPrime));
console.log([4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12].findLast(isPrime));
Using the third argument of callbackFn
The array
argument is useful if you want to access another element in the array, especially when you don't have an existing variable that refers to the array. The following example first uses filter()
to extract the positive values and then uses findLast()
to find the last element that is less than its neighbors.
const numbers = [3, -1, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9, 2, 6];
const lastTrough = numbers
.filter((num) => num > 0)
.findLast((num, idx, arr) => {
if (idx > 0 && num >= arr[idx - 1]) return false;
if (idx < arr.length - 1 && num >= arr[idx + 1]) return false;
return true;
});
console.log(lastTrough);
Using findLast() on sparse arrays
Empty slots in sparse arrays are visited, and are treated the same as undefined
.
const array = [0, 1, , , , 5, 6];
array.findLast((value, index) => {
console.log(`Visited index ${index} with value ${value}`);
});
array.findLast((value, index) => {
if (index === 6) {
console.log(`Deleting array[5] with value ${array[5]}`);
delete array[5];
}
console.log(`Visited index ${index} with value ${value}`);
});
Calling findLast() on non-array objects
The findLast()
method reads the length
property of this
and then accesses each property whose key is a nonnegative integer less than length
.
const arrayLike = {
length: 3,
0: 2,
1: 7.3,
2: 4,
3: 3,
};
console.log(
Array.prototype.findLast.call(arrayLike, (x) => Number.isInteger(x)),
);
Specifications
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
Server |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Opera |
Safari |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
WebView Android |
Deno |
Node.js |
findLast |
97 |
97 |
104 |
83 |
15.4 |
97 |
104 |
68 |
15.4 |
18.0 |
97 |
1.16 |
18.0.0 |