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YCM Jason
YCM Jason

Posted on • Edited on

JavaScript Range How to create range in Javascript

range is a function that basically takes in a starting index and ending index then return a list of all integers from start to end.

The most obvious way would be using a for loop.

function range(start, end) {
    var ans = [];
    for (let i = start; i <= end; i++) {
        ans.push(i);
    }
    return ans;
}
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As a fan of FP, let's come up with an recursive solution. So the base case is obviously when the start and end are the same, the answer would simply be [start].

function range(start, end) {
    if(start === end) return [start];
    // recursive case
}
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Now take the leap of faith, assume that range(start, end) will just work. Then how do we solve the problem range(start, end)? Simple! Just do [start, ...range(start + 1, end)].

So combining both, we get

function range(start, end) {
    if(start === end) return [start];
    return [start, ...range(start + 1, end)];
}
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A lot more elegant than the for-loop solution in my opinion. But we could even go further if we use new Array(n) which creates an array with n elements.

If we have an n element list, we could build a range from it by mapping each element to its index, i.e. arr.map((_, i) => i).

However, according to https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Array/map#Description, map will not call for unassigned element. This mean we need to initialise the new Array(n) before mapping. One standard technique is to use fill. The final result is the following.

function range(start, end) {
    return (new Array(end - start + 1)).fill(undefined).map((_, i) => i + start);
}
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We could also make use of Array.from to create range:

function range(start, end) {
  return Array.from({ length: end - start + 1 }, (_, i) => i)
}
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Thank you Step for mentioning about efficiency when handling large ranges, which essentially build a huge array. We could have a more efficient way of doing this by using generators.

function* range(start, end) {
    for (let i = start; i <= end; i++) {
        yield i;
    }
}
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We could use this generator in a for...of loop (which would be very efficient) or use an array spread to retrieve all values (note that this essentially builds the array which is essentially the same as the non-generator approaches.)

for (i of range(1, 5)) {
    console.log(i);
}
/* Output
 * 1 2 3 4 5 */

[...range(1, 5)] // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
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Since I always try to avoid for loops, we could also define the generator recursively as follows.

function* range(start, end) {
    yield start;
    if (start === end) return;
    yield* range(start + 1, end);
}
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Could you think of some cooler method to achieve this?

Top comments (58)

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namirsab profile image
Namir • Edited

I like this way:

const range = (start, end) => {
    const length = end - start;
    return Array.from({ length }, (_, i) => start + i);
}
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As array from works with arrayLike structures and receives a second optional argument mapFn, it's a nice candidate to build range.

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johnboy5358 profile image
John

Yes, excellent solution.

This, slimmed down, version also works...

const range = (start, end, length = end - start) =>
  Array.from({ length }, (_, i) => start + i)

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mbrookes profile image
Matt

Almost.

Try:

const range = (start, end, length = end - start + 1) =>
  Array.from({ length }, (_, i) => start + i)
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> range(0,2)
[ 0, 1, 2 ]
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acatalfano profile image
Adam Catalfano

as satisfying as this is, you're exposing a third argument that anyone can override. In a modern tech stack, this code is hesitantly admissible only if you can guarantee that absolutely no one can set length to be anything but end - start, otherwise you need to invest in a much more complex testing framework, likely outweighing the expense of adding a second line to this function.

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kerafyrm02 profile image
kerafyrm02 • Edited

const range = (start, end) => Array.from({length: end}, (_, i) => start + 1);

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johnboy5358 profile image
John

Sorry kerafyrm02, but that does not produce a range.

If I run range with range(1,50) I get [2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,...]

const range = (start, end) => Array.from({length: end}, (_, i) => start + 1); console.log(range(0,20))
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kerafyrm02 profile image
kerafyrm02 • Edited

let r = (s, e) => Array.from('x'.repeat(e - s), (_, i) => s + i);

Ok here ya go... even shorter. :D

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johnboy5358 profile image
John

Rock, paper, scissors... 68 chars, you've nailed it!

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kerafyrm02 profile image
kerafyrm02

lol., made range to r.. so even shorter :D

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johnboy5358 profile image
John • Edited

Trust me to bump into a js golfer.

Next you'll be telling me that you're dropping the let keyword and just leaving r on the global object!!

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

haha! nice solution John!

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johnboy5358 profile image
John

Well, thank you so much for saying!

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riancintiyo profile image
rionse09 • Edited

Hi All, I'm trying to grasp this function:

const range = (start, end) => {
    const length = end - start;
    return Array.from({ length }, (_, i) => start + i);
}
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But I still confused on why does passing { length } as first argument in Array.from is work to create new array with specific length.

Because what I read in the documentation about Array.from is only works for iterable or array like object.

Any explanation or help would be appreciate a lot. Thank you.

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jclemens24 profile image
Jordan Clemens

This is how I went about creating a different solution although it is only really beneficial by calling (value in target) and really only counts as a "typeof range" :) Just bored and playing around with proxies.

console.log(...generateRange());

let range = {
    start: 1,
    end: 10,
};

range = new Proxy(range, {
    has(target: typeof range, prop: string | symbol | number) {
        if (typeof prop === 'number') {
            return prop >= target.start && prop <= target.end;
        } else {
            return Number(prop) >= target.start && Number(prop) <= target.end;
        }
    },
});

console.log(5 in range);
console.log(50 in range);

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perrydbucs profile image
Perry Donham • Edited

If you're going to use => might as well go all in... (line break for readability on dev.to)

const range = (start, end) => new Array(end - start + 1)
.fill(undefined).map((_, i) => i + start)

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

I am quite against writing all functions as arrow functions. The reason being that arrow functions are not bind-able and it refers to the this from the outer scope. I feel that it is designed to prevent us writing var self = this; and refer to self in a callback function. So I tend to write arrow functions only when it is a callback or when it is a one-off function. Also if we use arrow function instead of proper function declaration in this case, we will lose the advantage which function hoisting provides. This means range might not be accessible by some earlier parts of our code. But it is all down to personal preference, do tell me what you think.

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perrydbucs profile image
Perry Donham

I don't like ambiguity in code. When I'm reviewing code and have to stop and figure out what this is referring to, it makes me frown; with arrow functions I always know exactly what this is. The 'swap this and that' pattern in JS always struck me as a hack. One of the big wins of arrow functions is eliminating the this ambiguity.

I have a similar feeling for hoisting. I understand why it is part of the language, but it always feels like a path to ruin when I have to rely on some behind-the-scenes reshuffling by the interpreter to get my code to run.

All that said, you are correct that there are situations in which arrow functions are not appropriate, which also make me crazy. Having two ways to write functions just adds confusion. "We recommend using arrow functions everyhwere. Oh, sorry, was that a constructor? Write that one this way instead..."

I can't wait to start seeing code in review that's built with templated classes. Maybe ES7 will introduce header files...

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason • Edited

Haha! I totally understand what you mean. But still since ES6 introduces class we should really move away from using function as a constructor. As soon as it is consistent in a team then it's fine.

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perrydbucs profile image
Perry Donham • Edited

Also, I'm a big fan of using variable names that describe what they are (even for internal functions), so (line break for readability on dev.to)
const range = (start, end) => new Array(end - start + 1)
.fill(undefined).map((value, index) => index + start)

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

On the other hand, I am a big fan of Haskell. And we tend to use _ to refer to variables which we don't use in the function. But I do agree with you that having meaningful names is a good practice and could help readability.

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perrydbucs profile image
Perry Donham • Edited

Even in Haskell, _ is a bad idea :) Think about the poor intern trying to learn the language while debugging your code. (And it isn't just Haskell...I did a lot of Perl back in the day, which at it best can look like line noise).

BTW since you are a fan of Haskell, I ran across this article the other day that you might enjoy, describing how to structure JS function with Haskell-styl currying.

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nycdude777 profile image
Rick Ellis • Edited

I liked your recursive generator. How about something like this:

Number.prototype.to = function* (end) {
  const start = this;
  const step = end > start ? 1 : -1;
  const fn = function* (n) {
    let next = start + step * n;
    yield next;
    if (next === end) return;
    yield* fn(n + 1);
  };
  yield start;
  yield* fn(1);   
}

const asc = [...(1).to(5)];
const dsc = [...(5).to(1)];

console.log(asc); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
console.log(dsc); // [5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
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pinksynth profile image
Sammy Taylor

This is great, I wish this would make its way into the spec.

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

Haha! I like this idea!

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jesseighor profile image
Ighor Jesse • Edited

This is an Awesome string of code you've written. I'm partial to Python3 behavior of range though. Made a few minor adjustments yours. Better to steal like an artist then build from scratch.

function* range(start=0, end=undefined, step=1) {    
    if( arguments.length === 1) {end = start, start = 0}    

    [...arguments].forEach(arg => {    
        if( typeof arg !== 'number') {throw new TypeError("Invalid argument")}                               
    })    
    if( arguments.length === 0) {throw new TypeError("range requires at least 1 argument, got 0")}    

    if(start >= end) return                                                                                                                                     
    yield start    
    yield* range(parseInt(start + step), end, step)    
}

// Use Cases
console.log([...range(5)])

console.log([...range(2, 5)])

console.log([...range(2, 5, 2)])
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josefrichter profile image
Josef Richter

The recursive one is really nice. Can be shortened to:

const range = (s, e) => e > s ? [s, ...range(s + 1, e)] : [s];
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Also this is another approach, + easier to handle descending sequences too:

const range = (s,e) => e > s ? Array(e - s + 1).fill(0).map((x, y) => y + s) : Array(s - e + 1).fill(0).map((x, y) => - y + s);
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danielboll profile image
Daniel Boll

I'm a little late for the discussion 😅 but I found the different ways interesting, I ended up getting this one. Is it valid?

const range = (start, end, length = end - start + 1) => [...Array(length).keys()].map(d => d + start) 
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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

Looks great to me!

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teraspora profile image
John Lynch

I just use a one-liner recursive arrow function in ES6; note, it doesn't check but you should only pass it integers else it will never get to a == b so it will blow the stack!



let range = (a, b) => a>b ? range(b, a).reverse() : (a==b ? [a] : range(a, b-1).concat(b));
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ycmjason profile image
Comment marked as low quality/non-constructive by the community. View Code of Conduct
YCM Jason

Are you actually using this in production code? 😂😂

You realise how inefficient this is right? 😂😂

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ycmjason profile image
YCM Jason

I have adapted Namir's method (see comments). And it is probably the most efficient.

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davidchase profile image
David Chase

Why not get really wild and crazy :P ?

1st define a unfoldr

const unfoldr = (f, seed, xs = [], next = f(seed)) =>
   next ? unfoldr(f, next[1], xs.concat(next[0])) : xs

then define a range in terms of unfold

const range = (from, to) =>
   unfoldr(seed => seed > to ? false : [seed, seed + 1], from)

excellent article btw, keep them coming :)

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mihailoff profile image
George Mihailov

Why nobody is wondering why this is not part of the standard library?

php.net/manual/en/function.range.php
ruby-doc.org/core-2.5.1/Range.html
docs.python.org/3.3/library/stdtyp...

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