Array.prototype.flat()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2020.
The flat()
method of Array
instances creates a new array with all sub-array
elements concatenated into it recursively up to the specified depth.
Try it
Syntax
flat()
flat(depth)
Parameters
depth
Optional-
The depth level specifying how deep a nested array structure should be flattened. Defaults to 1.
Return value
A new array with the sub-array elements concatenated into it.
Description
The flat()
method is a copying method. It does not alter this
but instead returns a shallow copy that contains the same elements as the ones from the original array.
The flat()
method ignores empty slots if the array being flattened is sparse. For example, if depth
is 1, both empty slots in the root array and in the first level of nested arrays are ignored, but empty slots in further nested arrays are preserved with the arrays themselves.
The flat()
method is generic. It only expects the this
value to have a length
property and integer-keyed properties. However, its elements must be arrays if they are to be flattened.
Examples
Flattening nested arrays
const arr1 = [1, 2, [3, 4]];
arr1.flat();
// [1, 2, 3, 4]
const arr2 = [1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6]]];
arr2.flat();
// [1, 2, 3, 4, [5, 6]]
const arr3 = [1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6]]];
arr3.flat(2);
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
const arr4 = [1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6, [7, 8, [9, 10]]]]];
arr4.flat(Infinity);
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
Using flat() on sparse arrays
The flat()
method removes empty slots in arrays:
const arr5 = [1, 2, , 4, 5];
console.log(arr5.flat()); // [1, 2, 4, 5]
const array = [1, , 3, ["a", , "c"]];
console.log(array.flat()); // [ 1, 3, "a", "c" ]
const array2 = [1, , 3, ["a", , ["d", , "e"]]];
console.log(array2.flat()); // [ 1, 3, "a", ["d", empty, "e"] ]
console.log(array2.flat(2)); // [ 1, 3, "a", "d", "e"]
Calling flat() on non-array objects
The flat()
method reads the length
property of this
and then accesses each property whose key is a nonnegative integer less than length
. If the element is not an array, it's directly appended to the result. If the element is an array, it's flattened according to the depth
parameter.
const arrayLike = {
length: 3,
0: [1, 2],
// Array-like objects aren't flattened
1: { length: 2, 0: 3, 1: 4 },
2: 5,
3: 3, // ignored by flat() since length is 3
};
console.log(Array.prototype.flat.call(arrayLike));
// [ 1, 2, { '0': 3, '1': 4, length: 2 }, 5 ]
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-array.prototype.flat |
Browser compatibility
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