I have an array with some values. How can I search that array using jquery for a value which is matched or close to it?
var a = [\"foo\",\"fool\",\"cool\",\"
To search in the array with Vanilla JS I would use the filter() method implemented into the Array prototype.
Note: For very large arrays you might want to consider refactoring those to async/await functions else it might slow down the user interface.
This is the most flexible approach as you could search for different patterns. You should be aware that the search term here is not a plain text, thus you have to escape most of non-alphanumeric chars according to the syntax. You should not pass unprocessed user input directly to the function, as it will not work as expected.
let a = ["foo","fool","cool","god"];
var term = 'oo'; // search term (regex pattern)
var search = new RegExp(term , 'i'); // prepare a regex object
let b = a.filter(item => search.test(item));
console.log(b); // ["foo","fool","cool"]
indexOf
(faster)In this particular case I would rather use indexOf() which is basically an equivalent of LIKE %term%
but much faster than using regular expressions when working with large arrays.
It is a common case to do case-insensitive searches so make sure to use toLowerCase()
for both the search terms and the array items. Otherwise remove it everywhere from the examples.
let a = ["foo","fool","cool","god"];
let term = 'oo';
let b = a.filter(item => item.toLowerCase().indexOf(term) > -1);
console.log(b); // ["foo","fool","cool"]
const fruits = ['apple', 'banana', 'grapes', 'mango', 'orange'];
const filterItems = (needle, heystack) => {
let query = needle.toLowerCase();
return heystack.filter(item => item.toLowerCase().indexOf(query) >= 0);
}
console.log(filterItems('ap', fruits)); // ['apple', 'grapes']
console.log(filterItems('ang', fruits)); // ['mango', 'orange']
var fruits = ['apple', 'banana', 'grapes', 'mango', 'orange'];
function filterItems(needle, heystack) {
var query = needle.toLowerCase();
return heystack.filter(function(item) {
return item.toLowerCase().indexOf(query) >= 0;
})
}
console.log(filterItems('ap', fruits)); // ['apple', 'grapes']
console.log(filterItems('ang', fruits)); // ['mango', 'orange']
This is the outdated answer
To search in the array with jQuery you might use
jQuery.grep()
orjQuery.map()
. Both return new array with filtered elements using a callback function.The fastest implementation (case insensitive) is using
indexOf
andtoUpperCase
in the callback:var search_term = 'oo'; // your search term as string var search = search_term.toUpperCase(); var array = jQuery.grep(a, function(value) { return value.toUpperCase().indexOf(search) >= 0; });
If you don't need case insensitive search you can remove both
.toUpperCase()
to speed it up even further.More flexible but much slower (good enough for small arrays) is to use regular expression:
var search_term = "oo"; // search term var search = new RegExp(search_term , "i"); var arr = jQuery.grep(a, function (value) { return search.test(value); });
or
var search_term = "oo"; // search term var search = new RegExp(search_term , "i"); var arr = jQuery.map(a, function (value) { return value.match(search) ? value : null; });
Regular expressions allow you to make searches much more complex than
%value%
. However don't use it if you don't need it because it is many times slower.you should get an array
arr
with the matched elements
You can do it with Alasql JavaScript SQL library. It supports LIKE operator, like in SQL
var a = ["foo","fool","cool","god"];
var searchString = "%oo%";
var res = alasql('SELECT COLUMN * FROM [?] WHERE [0] LIKE ?',[a, searchString]);
Try this example at jfFiddle.
use the following function if you are searching in array containing hashes object
function searchInArrayofHashes(array,key,keyword) {
responsearr = []
for(i=0;i<array.length;i++) {
if(array[i][key].indexOf(keyword) > -1 ) {
responsearr.push(array[i])
}
}
return responsearr
}
try $.inArray
http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.inArray/. I'm not sure if it will allow you to use a regular expression but its worth a try
try this:
var infoData = ["foo","fool","cool","god"],
search = 'oo';
//this makes the magic
infoData = $$(infoData).filter(function(){
return (this.search(search) >= 0)
})
var n = infoData.length;
console.log("size result: "+ n );
for(var item = 0; item < n ;item++){
console.log("item: "+item+" data : "+infoData[item]);
}
result:
size result: 3
item: 0 data : foo
item: 1 data : fool
item: 2 data : cool
Try the following js code
function likeMatch(q)
{
my_arr = ["foo","fool","cool","god"];
var rArr=[];
for(var t in my_arr)
{
if(my_arr[t].indexOf(q)>0)
rArr.push(my_arr[t]);
}
return(rArr);
}