This is an extensive overview of the jQuery.each()
function — one of jQuery’s most important and most used functions. In this article, we’ll find out why and take a look at how you can use it.
Key Takeaways
What is jQuery.each()
jQuery’s each() function is used to loop through each element of the target jQuery object — an object that contains one or more DOM elements, and exposes all jQuery functions. It’s very useful for multi-element DOM manipulation, as well as iterating over arbitrary arrays and object properties.
In addition to this function, jQuery provides a helper function with the same name that can be called without having previously selected or created any DOM elements.
jQuery.each() Syntax
Let’s see the different modes in action.
The following example selects every <div>
element on a web page and outputs the index and the ID of each of them:
// DOM ELEMENTS
$('div').each(function(index, value) {
console.log(`div${index}: ${this.id}`);
});
A possible output would be:
div0:header
div1:main
div2:footer
This version uses jQuery’s $(selector).each()
function, as opposed to the utility function.
The next example shows the use of the utility function. In this case the object to loop over is given as the first argument. In this example, we’ll show how to loop over an array:
// ARRAYS
const arr = [
'one',
'two',
'three',
'four',
'five'
];
$.each(arr, function(index, value) {
console.log(value);
// Will stop running after "three"
return (value !== 'three');
});
// Outputs: one two three
In the last example, we want to demonstrate how to iterate over the properties of an object:
// OBJECTS
const obj = {
one: 1,
two: 2,
three: 3,
four: 4,
five: 5
};
$.each(obj, function(key, value) {
console.log(value);
});
// Outputs: 1 2 3 4 5
This all boils down to providing a proper callback. The callback’s context, this
, will be equal to its second argument, which is the current value. However, since the context will always be an object, primitive values have to be wrapped:
$.each({ one: 1, two: 2 } , function(key, value) {
console.log(this);
});
// Number { 1 }
// Number { 2 }
`
This means that there’s no strict equality between the value and the context.
$.each({ one: 1 } , function(key, value) {
console.log(this == value);
console.log(this === value);
});
// true
// false
`
The first argument is the current index, which is either a number (for arrays) or string (for objects).
1. Basic jQuery.each() Function Example
Let’s see how the jQuery.each() function helps us in conjunction with a jQuery object. The first example selects all the a
elements in the page and outputs their href
attribute:
$('a').each(function(index, value){
console.log(this.href);
});
The second example outputs every external href
on the web page (assuming the HTTP(S) protocol only):
$('a').each(function(index, value){
const link = this.href;
if (link.match(/https?:\/\//)) {
console.log(link);
}
});
Let’s say we had the following links on the page:
<a href="https://www.sitepoint.com/">SitePoint</a>
<a href="https://developer.mozilla.org">MDN web docs</a>
<a href="http://example.com/">Example Domain</a>
The second example would output:
https://www.sitepoint.com/
https://developer.mozilla.org/
http://example.com/
We should note that DOM elements from a jQuery object are in their “native” form inside the callback passed to jQuery.each()
. The reason is that jQuery is in fact just a wrapper around an array of DOM elements. By using jQuery.each()
, this array is iterated in the same way as an ordinary array would be. Therefore, we don’t get wrapped elements out of the box.
With reference to our second example, this means we can get an element’s href
attribute by writing this.href
. If we wanted to use jQuery’s attr()
method, we would need to re-wrap the element like so: $(this).attr('href')
.
2. jQuery.each() Array Example
Let’s have another look at how an ordinary array can be handled:
const numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
$.each(numbers, function(index, value){
console.log(`${index}: ${value}`);
});
This snippet outputs:
0:1
1:2
2:3
3:4
4:5
Nothing special here. An array features numeric indices, so we obtain numbers starting from 0 and going up to N-1, where N is the number of elements in the array.
3. jQuery.each() JSON Example
We may have more complicated data structures, such as arrays in arrays, objects in objects, arrays in objects, or objects in arrays. Let’s see how jQuery.each()
can help us in such scenarios:
const colors = [
{ 'red': '#f00' },
{ 'green': '#0f0' },
{ 'blue': '#00f' }
];
$.each(colors, function() {
$.each(this, function(name, value) {
console.log(`${name} = ${value}`);
});
});
This example outputs:
red = #f00
green = #0f0
blue = #00f
We handle the nested structure with a nested call to jQuery.each()
. The outer call handles the array of the variable colors
; the inner call handles the individual objects. In this example each object has only one key, but in general, any number could be tackled with this code.
4. jQuery.each() Class Example
This example shows how to loop through each element with assigned class productDescription
given in the HTML below:
<div class="productDescription">Red</div>
<div>Pink</div>
<div class="productDescription">Orange</div>
<div class="generalDescription">Teal</div>
<div class="productDescription">Green</div>
We use the each()
helper instead of the each()
method on the selector.
$.each($('.productDescription'), function(index, value) {
console.log(index + ':' + $(value).text());
});
In this case, the output is:
0:Red
1:Orange
2:Green
We don’t have to include index and value. These are just parameters that help determine which DOM element we’re currently iterating on. Furthermore, in this scenario we can also use the more convenient each
method. We can write it like this:
$('.productDescription').each(function() {
console.log($(this).text());
});
And we’ll obtain this on the console:
Red
Orange
Green
Note that we’re wrapping the DOM element in a new jQuery instance, so that we can use jQuery’s text()
method to obtain the element’s text content.
5. jQuery.each() Delay Example
In the next example, when the user clicks the element with the ID 5demo
all list items will be set to orange immediately.
<ul id="5demo">
<li>One</li>
<li>Two</li>
<li>Three</li>
<li>Four</li>
<li>Five</li>
</ul>
After an index-dependent delay (0, 200, 400, … milliseconds) we fade out the element:
$('#5demo').on('click', function(e) {
$('li').each(function(index) {
$(this).css('background-color', 'orange')
.delay(index * 200)
.fadeOut(1500);
});
e.preventDefault();
});
Conclusion
In this post, we’ve demonstrated how to use the jQuery.each()
function to iterate over DOM elements, arrays and objects. It’s a powerful and time-saving little function that developers should have in their toolkits.
And if jQuery isn’t your thing, you might want to look at using JavaScript’s native Object.keys() and Array.prototype.forEach() methods. There are also libraries like foreach which let you iterate over the key value pairs of either an array-like object or a dictionary-like object.
Remember: $.each()
and $(selector).each()
are two different methods defined in two different ways.
This popular article was updated in 2020 to reflect current best practices and to update the conclusion’s advice on native solutions using modern JavaScript. For more in-depth JavaScript knowledge, read our book, JavaScript: Novice to Ninja, 2nd Edition.
FAQs on jQuery’s each()
Function
.each()
function in jQuery?
The .each()
function is used in jQuery to iterate through a collection of DOM elements and perform a specific action on each element.
.each()
function in jQuery?
You can use the .each()
function by selecting a set of elements with a jQuery selector, and then calling .each()
on that selection. You provide a callback function that defines the action to be performed on each element.
.each()
?
The callback function accepts two parameters: index
(the current index of the element in the collection) and element
(the current DOM element being iterated over).
index
parameter in the .each()
callback function?
You can use the index
parameter to keep track of the current element’s position in the collection, which can be useful for conditional actions or other operations.
.each()
function?
Common use cases include iterating through a list of elements to manipulate their properties, values, or styles, and performing custom actions on each element in a collection.
Florian Rappl is an independent IT consultant working in the areas of client / server programming, High Performance Computing and web development. He is an expert in C/C++, C# and JavaScript. Florian regularly gives talks at conferences or user groups. You can find his blog at florian-rappl.de.
Network admin, freelance web developer and editor at SitePoint.