#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct Array { /* private fields */ }
Expand description

Implementations

Creates a new empty array.

Creates a new array with the specified length (elements are initialized to undefined).

Retrieves the element at the index, counting from the end if negative (returns undefined if the index is out of range).

Retrieves the element at the index (returns undefined if the index is out of range).

Sets the element at the index (auto-enlarges the array if the index is out of range).

Deletes the element at the index (does nothing if the index is out of range).

The element at the index is set to undefined.

This does not resize the array, the array will still be the same length.

The Array.from() method creates a new, shallow-copied Array instance from an array-like or iterable object.

The copyWithin() method shallow copies part of an array to another location in the same array and returns it, without modifying its size.

MDN documentation

The concat() method is used to merge two or more arrays. This method does not change the existing arrays, but instead returns a new array.

MDN documentation

The every() method tests whether all elements in the array pass the test implemented by the provided function.

MDN documentation

The fill() method fills all the elements of an array from a start index to an end index with a static value. The end index is not included.

MDN documentation

The filter() method creates a new array with all elements that pass the test implemented by the provided function.

MDN documentation

The find() method returns the value of the first element in the array that satisfies the provided testing function. Otherwise undefined is returned.

MDN documentation

The findIndex() method returns the index of the first element in the array that satisfies the provided testing function. Otherwise -1 is returned.

MDN documentation

The flat() method creates a new array with all sub-array elements concatenated into it recursively up to the specified depth.

MDN documentation

The flatMap() method first maps each element using a mapping function, then flattens the result into a new array.

MDN documentation

The forEach() method executes a provided function once for each array element.

MDN documentation

The includes() method determines whether an array includes a certain element, returning true or false as appropriate.

MDN documentation

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.

MDN documentation

The Array.isArray() method determines whether the passed value is an Array.

MDN documentation

The join() method joins all elements of an array (or an array-like object) into a string and returns this string.

MDN documentation

The lastIndexOf() method returns the last index at which a given element can be found in the array, or -1 if it is not present. The array is searched backwards, starting at fromIndex.

MDN documentation

The length property of an object which is an instance of type Array sets or returns the number of elements in that array. The value is an unsigned, 32-bit integer that is always numerically greater than the highest index in the array.

MDN documentation

map() calls a provided callback function once for each element in an array, in order, and constructs a new array from the results. callback is invoked only for indexes of the array which have assigned values, including undefined. It is not called for missing elements of the array (that is, indexes that have never been set, which have been deleted or which have never been assigned a value).

MDN documentation

The Array.of() method creates a new Array instance with a variable number of arguments, regardless of number or type of the arguments.

The difference between Array.of() and the Array constructor is in the handling of integer arguments: Array.of(7) creates an array with a single element, 7, whereas Array(7) creates an empty array with a length property of 7 (Note: this implies an array of 7 empty slots, not slots with actual undefined values).

MDN documentation

Notes

There are a few bindings to of in js-sys: of1, of2, etc… with different arities.

The pop() method removes the last element from an array and returns that element. This method changes the length of the array.

MDN documentation

The push() method adds one or more elements to the end of an array and returns the new length of the array.

MDN documentation

The reduce() method applies a function against an accumulator and each element in the array (from left to right) to reduce it to a single value.

MDN documentation

The reduceRight() method applies a function against an accumulator and each value of the array (from right-to-left) to reduce it to a single value.

MDN documentation

The reverse() method reverses an array in place. The first array element becomes the last, and the last array element becomes the first.

MDN documentation

The shift() method removes the first element from an array and returns that removed element. This method changes the length of the array.

MDN documentation

The slice() method returns a shallow copy of a portion of an array into a new array object selected from begin to end (end not included). The original array will not be modified.

MDN documentation

The some() method tests whether at least one element in the array passes the test implemented by the provided function. Note: This method returns false for any condition put on an empty array. MDN documentation

The sort() method sorts the elements of an array in place and returns the array. The sort is not necessarily stable. The default sort order is according to string Unicode code points.

The time and space complexity of the sort cannot be guaranteed as it is implementation dependent.

MDN documentation

The splice() method changes the contents of an array by removing existing elements and/or adding new elements.

MDN documentation

The toLocaleString() method returns a string representing the elements of the array. The elements are converted to Strings using their toLocaleString methods and these Strings are separated by a locale-specific String (such as a comma “,”).

MDN documentation

The toString() method returns a string representing the specified array and its elements.

MDN documentation

The unshift() method adds one or more elements to the beginning of an array and returns the new length of the array.

MDN documentation

Returns an iterator over the values of the JS array.

Converts the JS array into a new Vec.

The keys() method returns a new Array Iterator object that contains the keys for each index in the array.

MDN documentation

The entries() method returns a new Array Iterator object that contains the key/value pairs for each index in the array.

MDN documentation

The values() method returns a new Array Iterator object that contains the values for each index in the array.

MDN documentation

Methods from Deref<Target = Object>

The constructor property returns a reference to the Object constructor function that created the instance object.

MDN documentation

The hasOwnProperty() method returns a boolean indicating whether the object has the specified property as its own property (as opposed to inheriting it).

MDN documentation

The isPrototypeOf() method checks if an object exists in another object’s prototype chain.

MDN documentation

The propertyIsEnumerable() method returns a Boolean indicating whether the specified property is enumerable.

MDN documentation

The toLocaleString() method returns a string representing the object. This method is meant to be overridden by derived objects for locale-specific purposes.

MDN documentation

The toString() method returns a string representing the object.

MDN documentation

The valueOf() method returns the primitive value of the specified object.

MDN documentation

Methods from Deref<Target = JsValue>

Returns the f64 value of this JS value if it’s an instance of a number.

If this JS value is not an instance of a number then this returns None.

Tests whether this JS value is a JS string.

If this JS value is a string value, this function copies the JS string value into wasm linear memory, encoded as UTF-8, and returns it as a Rust String.

To avoid the copying and re-encoding, consider the JsString::try_from() function from js-sys instead.

If this JS value is not an instance of a string or if it’s not valid utf-8 then this returns None.

UTF-16 vs UTF-8

JavaScript strings in general are encoded as UTF-16, but Rust strings are encoded as UTF-8. This can cause the Rust string to look a bit different than the JS string sometimes. For more details see the documentation about the str type which contains a few caveats about the encodings.

Returns the bool value of this JS value if it’s an instance of a boolean.

If this JS value is not an instance of a boolean then this returns None.

Tests whether this JS value is null

Tests whether this JS value is undefined

Tests whether the type of this JS value is symbol

Tests whether typeof self == "object" && self !== null.

Tests whether the type of this JS value is function.

Tests whether the type of this JS value is bigint.

Applies the unary typeof JS operator on a JsValue.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary in JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Tests whether the value is “truthy”.

Tests whether the value is “falsy”.

Compare two JsValues for equality, using the == operator in JS.

MDN documentation

Applies the unary ~ JS operator on a JsValue.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary >>> JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary / JS operator on two JsValues, catching and returning any RangeError thrown.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary ** JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary < JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary <= JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary >= JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the binary > JS operator on the two JsValues.

MDN documentation

Applies the unary + JS operator on a JsValue. Can throw.

MDN documentation

Trait Implementations

Converts this type into a shared reference of the (usually inferred) input type.

Converts this type into a shared reference of the (usually inferred) input type.

Converts this type into a shared reference of the (usually inferred) input type.

Returns a copy of the value. Read more

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Returns the “default value” for a type. Read more

The resulting type after dereferencing.

Dereferences the value.

Extends a collection with the contents of an iterator. Read more

🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (extend_one)

Extends a collection with exactly one element.

🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (extend_one)

Reserves capacity in a collection for the given number of additional elements. Read more

Converts to this type from the input type.

Converts to this type from the input type.

Converts to this type from the input type.

Creates a value from an iterator. Read more

The wasm ABI type that this converts from when coming back out from the ABI boundary. Read more

Recover a Self from Self::Abi. Read more

The wasm ABI type that this converts into when crossing the ABI boundary. Read more

Convert self into Self::Abi so that it can be sent across the wasm ABI boundary. Read more

The wasm ABI type that this converts into when crossing the ABI boundary. Read more

Convert self into Self::Abi so that it can be sent across the wasm ABI boundary. Read more

Performs a dynamic instanceof check to see whether the JsValue provided is an instance of this type. Read more

Performs a dynamic check to see whether the JsValue provided is a value of this type. Read more

Performs a zero-cost unchecked conversion from a JsValue into an instance of Self Read more

Performs a zero-cost unchecked conversion from a &JsValue into an instance of &Self. Read more

Test whether this JS value has a type T. Read more

Performs a dynamic cast (checked at runtime) of this value into the target type T. Read more

Performs a dynamic cast (checked at runtime) of this value into the target type T. Read more

Performs a zero-cost unchecked cast into the specified type. Read more

Performs a zero-cost unchecked cast into a reference to the specified type. Read more

Test whether this JS value is an instance of the type T. Read more

Tests whether the argument is a “none” instance. If so it will be deserialized as None, and otherwise it will be passed to FromWasmAbi. Read more

Returns an ABI instance indicating “none”, which JS will interpret as the None branch of this option. Read more

Returns an ABI instance indicating “none”, which JS will interpret as the None branch of this option. Read more

This method tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==. Read more

This method tests for !=.

The wasm ABI type references to Self are recovered from.

The type that holds the reference to Self for the duration of the invocation of the function that has an &Self parameter. This is required to ensure that the lifetimes don’t persist beyond one function call, and so that they remain anonymous. Read more

Recover a Self::Anchor from Self::Abi. Read more

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Returns the argument unchanged.

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

Same as IntoWasmAbi::Abi

Same as IntoWasmAbi::into_abi, except that it may throw and never return in the case of Err. Read more

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.

Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more

Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.