Delete vs splice on associative array Delete vs splice on associative array arrays arrays

Delete vs splice on associative array


The terminology in js can be confusing at first, so lets straighten that out.

Yes, pretty much everything in js is an object. However, there are differences in the data types.

An array can be used like as associative array, but it's different than an object literal.

var x = []; //arrayvar y = {}; //object literal

An array is like a list. The keys of an array can be a numerical index or a string.

var x = ['a','b']; // x[0] === 'a', x[1] === 'b';var x = [];    x['one'] = 'a';    x['blah'] = 'b'; 

Object literals are like dictionaries. They can be used in a similar way.

var x = { 0: 'a', 1: 'b' };var x = { one: 'a', two: 'b' };

However, this is where you need to understand the differences.

You can use an array like an object literal, but you can't use an object literal quite like an array.

Arrays have the automated "length" property, that increments and decrements automatically based on the total number of elements in the array. You don't get this with object literals. Arrays also get all of the other array-specific methods like shift, unshift, splice, pop, push, etc. Object literals don't have those methods.

Let's talk about delete and what happens on an array and on an object literal.

var x = ['a', 'b']; //["a", "b"]delete x[0]; //[undefined, "b"]var x = {0:'1', 1:'b'}// { 0:"1", 1:"b"}delete x[0]; // { 1:"b" }

If you perform a delete on an element of an array, the length of the array doesn't change. The element index is preserved and the value is set to 'undefined';

Conversely, performing a delete on an object literal removes the key/value from the object.

Finally, if you want to remove an element from an array.

var x = ['a', 'b']; x.splice(0,1); //modifies x. ['b']

So, in summary use delete on object literals. Use splice on arrays.

Hope this helps.


There is no other option. myArr["someCrazyIndexYouHaventPreviouslyUsed"] will return undefined; an associative array will always give you undefined for indexes that don't exist.

So delete myArr[someId] will cause myArr to treat someId like every other index that doesn't exist—isn't that what you want?