The JavaScript delete
removes a property from an object; if no more references to the same property are held, it is eventually released automatically.
delete expression
where expression should evaluate to a property reference, e.g.:
delete object.property delete object['property']
object
property
true
for all cases except when the property is an own non-configurable property, in which case, false
is returned in non-strict mode.
Throws Global_objects/SyntaxError
in strict mode if the property is an own non-configurable property.
Unlike what common belief suggests, the delete
operator has nothing to do with directly freeing memory. Memory management is done indirectly via breaking references. See the memory management page for more details.
The delete
operator removes a given property from an object. On successful deletion, it will return true
, else false
will be returned. However, it is important to consider the following scenarios:
delete
will not have any effect and will return true
delete
only has an effect on own properties).var
cannot be deleted from the global scope or from a function's scope. delete
cannot delete any functions in the global scope (whether this is part from a function definition or a function expression).delete
.let
or const
cannot be deleted from the scope within which they were defined.Math
, Array
, Object
and properties that are created as non-configurable with methods like Object.defineProperty()
.The following snippet gives a simple example:
var Employee = { age: 28, name: 'abc', designation: 'developer' } console.log(delete Employee.name); // returns true console.log(delete Employee.age); // returns true // When trying to delete a property that does // not exist, true is returned console.log(delete Employee.salary); // returns true
When a property is marked as non-configurable, delete
won't have any effect, and will return false
. In strict mode this will raise a SyntaxError
.
var Employee = {}; Object.defineProperty(Employee, 'name', {configurable: false}); console.log(delete Employee.name); // returns false
var
, let
and const
create non-configurable properties that cannot be deleted with the delete
operator:
var nameOther = 'XYZ'; // We can access this global property using: Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(window, 'nameOther'); // output: Object {value: "XYZ", // writable: true, // enumerable: true, // configurable: false} // Since "nameOther" is added using with the // var keyword, it is marked as "non-configurable" delete nameOther; // return false
In strict mode, this would have raised an exception.
When in strict mode, if delete
is used on a direct reference to a variable, a function argument or a function name, it will throw a SyntaxError
.
Any variable defined with var
is marked as non-configurable. In the following example, salary
is non-configurable and cannot be deleted. In non-strict mode, the delete
operation will return false
.
function Employee() { delete salary; var salary; } Employee();
Let's see how the same code behaves in strict mode. Instead of returning false
, the statement raises a SyntaxError
.
"use strict"; function Employee() { delete salary; // SyntaxError var salary; } // Similarly, any direct access to a function // with delete will raise a SyntaxError function DemoFunction() { //some code } delete DemoFunction; // SyntaxError
// Creates the property adminName on the global scope. adminName = 'xyz'; // Creates the property empCount on the global scope. // Since we are using var, this is marked as non-configurable. The same is true of let and const. var empCount = 43; EmployeeDetails = { name: 'xyz', age: 5, designation: 'Developer' }; // adminName is a property of the global scope. // It can be deleted since it is created without var, // and is therefore configurable. delete adminName; // returns true // On the contrary, empCount is not configurable // since var was used. delete empCount; // returns false // delete can be used to remove properties from objects. delete EmployeeDetails.name; // returns true // Even when the property does not exist, delete returns "true". delete EmployeeDetails.salary; // returns true // delete does not affect built-in static properties. delete Math.PI; // returns false // EmployeeDetails is a property of the global scope. // Since it was defined without "var", it is marked configurable. delete EmployeeDetails; // returns true function f() { var z = 44; // delete doesn't affect local variable names delete z; // returns false }
delete
and the prototype chainIn the following example, we delete an own property of an object while a property with the same name is available on the prototype chain:
function Foo() { this.bar = 10; } Foo.prototype.bar = 42; var foo = new Foo(); // foo.bar is associated with the // own property. console.log(foo.bar); // 10 // Delete the own property within the // foo object. delete foo.bar; // returns true // foo.bar is still available in the // prototype chain. console.log(foo.bar); // 42 // Delete the property on the prototype. delete Foo.prototype.bar; // returns true // The "bar" property can no longer be // inherited from Foo since it has been // deleted. console.log(foo.bar); // undefined
When you delete an array element, the array length is not affected. This holds even if you delete the last element of the array.
When the delete
operator removes an array element, that element is no longer in the array. In the following example, trees[3]
is removed with delete
.
var trees = ['redwood', 'bay', 'cedar', 'oak', 'maple']; delete trees[3]; if (3 in trees) { // this is not executed }
If you want an array element to exist but have an undefined value, use the undefined
value instead of the delete
operator. In the following example, trees[3]
is assigned the value undefined, but the array element still exists:
var trees = ['redwood', 'bay', 'cedar', 'oak', 'maple']; trees[3] = undefined; if (3 in trees) { // this is executed }
If instead, you want to remove an array element by changing the contents of the array, use the
method. In the following example, splice
trees[3]
is removed from the array completely using
:splice
var trees = ['redwood', 'bay', 'cedar', 'oak', 'maple']; trees.splice(3,1); console.log(trees); // ["redwood", "bay", "cedar", "maple"]
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
ECMAScript Latest Draft (ECMA-262) The definition of 'The delete Operator' in that specification. | Draft | |
ECMAScript 2015 (6th Edition, ECMA-262) The definition of 'The delete Operator' in that specification. | Standard | |
ECMAScript 5.1 (ECMA-262) The definition of 'The delete Operator' in that specification. | Standard | |
ECMAScript 1st Edition (ECMA-262) The definition of 'The delete Operator' in that specification. | Standard | Initial definition. Implemented in JavaScript 1.2. |
Desktop | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chrome | Edge | Firefox | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari | |
Basic support | Yes | Yes | 1 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Temporal dead zone | ? | ? | 36 | ? | ? | ? |
Mobile | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Android webview | Chrome for Android | Edge Mobile | Firefox for Android | Opera for Android | iOS Safari | Samsung Internet | |
Basic support | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Temporal dead zone | ? | ? | ? | 36 | ? | ? | ? |
Server | |
---|---|
Node.js | |
Basic support | Yes |
Temporal dead zone | ? |
Although ECMAScript makes iteration order of objects implementation-dependent, it may appear that all major browsers support an iteration order based on the earliest added property coming first (at least for properties not on the prototype). However, in the case of Internet Explorer, when one uses delete
on a property, some confusing behavior results, preventing other browsers from using simple objects like object literals as ordered associative arrays. In Explorer, while the property value is indeed set to undefined, if one later adds back a property with the same name, the property will be iterated in its old position--not at the end of the iteration sequence as one might expect after having deleted the property and then added it back.
If you want to use an ordered associative array in a cross-browser environment, use a Map
object if available, or simulate this structure with two separate arrays (one for the keys and the other for the values), or build an array of single-property objects, etc.
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https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/delete