Remove an item from array using UnderscoreJS

Underscore has a _without() method perfect for removing an item from an array, especially if you have the object to remove.

Returns a copy of the array with all instances of the values removed.

_.without(["bob", "sam", "fred"], "sam");

=> ["bob", "fred"]

Works with more complex objects too.

var bob = { Name: "Bob", Age: 35 };
var sam = { Name: "Sam", Age: 19 };
var fred = { Name: "Fred", Age: 50 };

var people = [bob, sam, fred]

_.without(people, sam);

=> [{ Name: "Bob", Age: 35 }, { Name: "Fred", Age: 50 }];

If you don't have the item to remove, just a property of it, you can use _.findWhere and then _.without.


Use Underscore _.reject():

arr = _.reject(arr, function(d){ return d.id === 3; });

You can use Underscore .filter

    var arr = [{
      id: 1,
      name: 'a'
    }, {
      id: 2,
      name: 'b'
    }, {
      id: 3,
      name: 'c'
    }];

    var filtered = _(arr).filter(function(item) {
         return item.id !== 3
    });

Can also be written as:

var filtered = arr.filter(function(item) {
    return item.id !== 3
});

var filtered = _.filter(arr, function(item) {
    return item.id !== 3
});

Check Fiddle

You can also use .reject


Just using plain JavaScript, this has been answered already: remove objects from array by object property.

Using underscore.js, you could combine .findWhere with .without:

var arr = [{
  id: 1,
  name: 'a'
}, {
  id: 2,
  name: 'b'
}, {
  id: 3,
  name: 'c'
}];

//substract third
arr = _.without(arr, _.findWhere(arr, {
  id: 3
}));
console.log(arr);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/underscore.js/1.8.3/underscore-min.js"></script>

Although, since you are creating a new array in this case anyway, you could simply use _.filter or the native Array.prototype.filter function (just like shown in the other question). Then you would only iterate over array once instead of potentially twice like here.

If you want to modify the array in-place, you have to use .splice. This is also shown in the other question and undescore doesn't seem to provide any useful function for that.