JavaScript: The Definitive Guide

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3.7 Arrays

An array is a collection of data values, just as an object is. While each data value contained in an object has a name, each data value in an array has a number, or index. In JavaScript, arrays are indexed (i.e., individual numbered values are retrieved from the array) by enclosing the index within square brackets after the array name. For example, if an array is named a, and i is an integer, then a[i] is an element of the array. Array indexes begin with zero. Thus a[2] refers to the third element of the array a.

Arrays may contain any type of JavaScript data, including references to other arrays or to objects or functions. So, for example, the JavaScript code:

document.images[1].width
refers to the width property of an object stored in the second element of an array stored in the images property of the document object.

Note that the arrays described here differ from the associative arrays described in the previous section. The "regular" arrays we are discussing are indexed by integers. Associative arrays are indexed by strings. Also note that JavaScript does not support multidimensional arrays, except as arrays of arrays. Finally, because JavaScript is an untyped language, the elements of an array do not all need to be of the same type, as they do in typed languages like Java. We'll learn more about arrays in Chapter 8, Arrays.


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