TypedArray.prototype.every()
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2016.
The every()
method of TypedArray
instances returns false
if it finds one element in the array that does not satisfy the provided testing function. Otherwise, it returns true
. This method has the same algorithm as Array.prototype.every()
.
Try it
function isNegative(element, index, array) {
return element < 0;
}
const int8 = new Int8Array([-10, -20, -30, -40, -50]);
console.log(int8.every(isNegative));
// Expected output: true
Syntax
every(callbackFn)
every(callbackFn, thisArg)
Parameters
callbackFn
-
A function to execute for each element in the typed array. It should return a truthy value to indicate the element passes the test, and a falsy value otherwise. The function is called with the following arguments:
thisArg
Optional-
A value to use as
this
when executingcallbackFn
. See iterative methods.
Return value
true
unless callbackFn
returns a falsy value for a typed array element, in which case false
is immediately returned.
Description
See Array.prototype.every()
for more details. This method is not generic and can only be called on typed array instances.
Examples
>Testing size of all typed array elements
The following example tests whether all elements in the typed array are 10 or bigger.
function isBigEnough(element, index, array) {
return element >= 10;
}
new Uint8Array([12, 5, 8, 130, 44]).every(isBigEnough); // false
new Uint8Array([12, 54, 18, 130, 44]).every(isBigEnough); // true
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-%typedarray%.prototype.every> |
Browser compatibility
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