Three main options:

  1. for (var i = 0; i < xs.length; i++) { console.log(xs[i]); }
  2. xs.forEach((x, i) => console.log(x));
  3. for (const x of xs) { console.log(x); }

Detailed examples are below.


1. Sequential for loop:

var myStringArray = ["Hello","World"];
var arrayLength = myStringArray.length;
for (var i = 0; i < arrayLength; i++) {
    console.log(myStringArray[i]);
    //Do something
}

Pros

  • Works on every environment
  • You can use break and continue flow control statements

Cons

  • Too verbose
  • Imperative
  • Easy to have off-by-one errors (sometimes also called a fence post error)

2. Array.prototype.forEach:

The ES5 specification introduced a lot of beneficial array methods. One of them, the Array.prototype.forEach, gave us a concise way to iterate over an array:

const array = ["one", "two", "three"]
array.forEach(function (item, index) {
  console.log(item, index);
});

Being almost ten years as the time of writing that the ES5 specification was released (Dec. 2009), it has been implemented by nearly all modern engines in the desktop, server, and mobile environments, so it's safe to use them.

And with the ES6 arrow function syntax, it's even more succinct:

array.forEach(item => console.log(item));

Arrow functions are also widely implemented unless you plan to support ancient platforms (e.g., Internet Explorer 11); you are also safe to go.

Pros

  • Very short and succinct.
  • Declarative

Cons

  • Cannot use break / continue

Normally, you can replace the need to break out of imperative loops by filtering the array elements before iterating them, for example:

array.filter(item => item.condition < 10)
     .forEach(item => console.log(item))

Keep in mind if you are iterating an array to build another array from it, you should use map. I've seen this anti-pattern so many times.

Anti-pattern:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5], doubled = [];

numbers.forEach((n, i) => { doubled[i] = n * 2 });

Proper use case of map:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const doubled = numbers.map(n => n * 2);

console.log(doubled);

Also, if you are trying to reduce the array to a value, for example, you want to sum an array of numbers, you should use the reduce method.

Anti-pattern:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const sum = 0;
numbers.forEach(num => { sum += num });

Proper use of reduce:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const sum = numbers.reduce((total, n) => total + n, 0);

console.log(sum);

3. ES6 for-of statement:

The ES6 standard introduces the concept of iterable objects and defines a new construct for traversing data, the for...of statement.

This statement works for any kind of iterable object and also for generators (any object that has a \[Symbol.iterator\] property).

Array objects are by definition built-in iterables in ES6, so you can use this statement on them:

let colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue'];
for (const color of colors){
    console.log(color);
}

Pros

  • It can iterate over a large variety of objects.
  • Can use normal flow control statements (break / continue).
  • Useful to iterate serially asynchronous values.

Cons

  • If you are targeting older browsers, the transpiled output might surprise you.

Do not use for...in

@zipcodeman suggests the use of the for...in statement, but for iterating arrays for-in should be avoided, that statement is meant to enumerate object properties.

It shouldn't be used for array-like objects because:

  • The order of iteration is not guaranteed; the array indexes may not be visited in numeric order.
  • Inherited properties are also enumerated.

The second point is that it can give you a lot of problems, for example, if you extend the Array.prototype object to include a method there, that property will also be enumerated.

For example:

Array.prototype.foo = "foo!";
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c'];

for (var i in array) {
    console.log(array[i]);
}

The above code will console log "a", "b", "c", and "foo!".

That can be particularly a problem if you use some library that relies heavily on native prototypes augmentation (such as MooTools).

The for-in statement, as I said before, is there to enumerate object properties, for example:

var obj = {
    "a": 1,
    "b": 2,
    "c": 3
};

for (var prop in obj) {
    if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
        // or if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj,prop)) for safety...
        console.log("prop: " + prop + " value: " + obj[prop])
    }
}

In the above example, the hasOwnProperty method allows you to enumerate only own properties. That's it, only the properties that the object physically has, no inherited properties.

I would recommend you to read the following article:

  • Enumeration VS Iteration
Answer from Christian C. Salvadó on Stack Overflow
Top answer
1 of 16
5291

Three main options:

  1. for (var i = 0; i < xs.length; i++) { console.log(xs[i]); }
  2. xs.forEach((x, i) => console.log(x));
  3. for (const x of xs) { console.log(x); }

Detailed examples are below.


1. Sequential for loop:

var myStringArray = ["Hello","World"];
var arrayLength = myStringArray.length;
for (var i = 0; i < arrayLength; i++) {
    console.log(myStringArray[i]);
    //Do something
}

Pros

  • Works on every environment
  • You can use break and continue flow control statements

Cons

  • Too verbose
  • Imperative
  • Easy to have off-by-one errors (sometimes also called a fence post error)

2. Array.prototype.forEach:

The ES5 specification introduced a lot of beneficial array methods. One of them, the Array.prototype.forEach, gave us a concise way to iterate over an array:

const array = ["one", "two", "three"]
array.forEach(function (item, index) {
  console.log(item, index);
});

Being almost ten years as the time of writing that the ES5 specification was released (Dec. 2009), it has been implemented by nearly all modern engines in the desktop, server, and mobile environments, so it's safe to use them.

And with the ES6 arrow function syntax, it's even more succinct:

array.forEach(item => console.log(item));

Arrow functions are also widely implemented unless you plan to support ancient platforms (e.g., Internet Explorer 11); you are also safe to go.

Pros

  • Very short and succinct.
  • Declarative

Cons

  • Cannot use break / continue

Normally, you can replace the need to break out of imperative loops by filtering the array elements before iterating them, for example:

array.filter(item => item.condition < 10)
     .forEach(item => console.log(item))

Keep in mind if you are iterating an array to build another array from it, you should use map. I've seen this anti-pattern so many times.

Anti-pattern:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5], doubled = [];

numbers.forEach((n, i) => { doubled[i] = n * 2 });

Proper use case of map:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const doubled = numbers.map(n => n * 2);

console.log(doubled);

Also, if you are trying to reduce the array to a value, for example, you want to sum an array of numbers, you should use the reduce method.

Anti-pattern:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const sum = 0;
numbers.forEach(num => { sum += num });

Proper use of reduce:

const numbers = [1,2,3,4,5];
const sum = numbers.reduce((total, n) => total + n, 0);

console.log(sum);

3. ES6 for-of statement:

The ES6 standard introduces the concept of iterable objects and defines a new construct for traversing data, the for...of statement.

This statement works for any kind of iterable object and also for generators (any object that has a \[Symbol.iterator\] property).

Array objects are by definition built-in iterables in ES6, so you can use this statement on them:

let colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue'];
for (const color of colors){
    console.log(color);
}

Pros

  • It can iterate over a large variety of objects.
  • Can use normal flow control statements (break / continue).
  • Useful to iterate serially asynchronous values.

Cons

  • If you are targeting older browsers, the transpiled output might surprise you.

Do not use for...in

@zipcodeman suggests the use of the for...in statement, but for iterating arrays for-in should be avoided, that statement is meant to enumerate object properties.

It shouldn't be used for array-like objects because:

  • The order of iteration is not guaranteed; the array indexes may not be visited in numeric order.
  • Inherited properties are also enumerated.

The second point is that it can give you a lot of problems, for example, if you extend the Array.prototype object to include a method there, that property will also be enumerated.

For example:

Array.prototype.foo = "foo!";
var array = ['a', 'b', 'c'];

for (var i in array) {
    console.log(array[i]);
}

The above code will console log "a", "b", "c", and "foo!".

That can be particularly a problem if you use some library that relies heavily on native prototypes augmentation (such as MooTools).

The for-in statement, as I said before, is there to enumerate object properties, for example:

var obj = {
    "a": 1,
    "b": 2,
    "c": 3
};

for (var prop in obj) {
    if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop)) {
        // or if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj,prop)) for safety...
        console.log("prop: " + prop + " value: " + obj[prop])
    }
}

In the above example, the hasOwnProperty method allows you to enumerate only own properties. That's it, only the properties that the object physically has, no inherited properties.

I would recommend you to read the following article:

  • Enumeration VS Iteration
2 of 16
1210

Yes, assuming your implementation includes the for...of feature introduced in ECMAScript 2015 (the "Harmony" release)... which is a pretty safe assumption these days.

It works like this:

// REQUIRES ECMASCRIPT 2015+
var s, myStringArray = ["Hello", "World"];
for (s of myStringArray) {
  // ... do something with s ...
}

Or better yet, since ECMAScript 2015 also provides block-scoped variables:

// REQUIRES ECMASCRIPT 2015+
const myStringArray = ["Hello", "World"];
for (const s of myStringArray) {
  // ... do something with s ...
}
// s is no longer defined here

(The variable s is different on each iteration, but can still be declared const inside the loop body as long as it isn't modified there.)

A note on sparse arrays: an array in JavaScript may not actually store as many items as reported by its length; that number is simply one greater than the highest index at which a value is stored. If the array holds fewer elements than indicated by its length, its said to be sparse. For example, it's perfectly legitimate to have an array with items only at indexes 3, 12, and 247; the length of such an array is 248, though it is only actually storing 3 values. If you try to access an item at any other index, the array will appear to have the undefined value there, but the array is nonetheless is distinct from one that actually has undefined values stored. You can see this difference in a number of ways, for example in the way the Node REPL displays arrays:

> a              // array with only one item, at index 12
[ <12 empty items>, 1 ]
> a[0]           // appears to have undefined at index 0
undefined
> a[0]=undefined // but if we put an actual undefined there
undefined
> a              // it now looks like this
[ undefined, <11 empty items>, 1 ]

So when you want to "loop through" an array, you have a question to answer: do you want to loop over the full range indicated by its length and process undefineds for any missing elements, or do you only want to process the elements actually present? There are plenty of applications for both approaches; it just depends on what you're using the array for.

If you iterate over an array with for..of, the body of the loop is executed length times, and the loop control variable is set to undefined for any items not actually present in the array. Depending on the details of your "do something with" code, that behavior may be what you want, but if not, you should use a different approach.

Of course, some developers have no choice but to use a different approach anyway, because for whatever reason they're targeting a version of JavaScript that doesn't yet support for...of.

As long as your JavaScript implementation is compliant with the previous edition of the ECMAScript specification (which rules out, for example, versions of Internet Explorer before 9), then you can use the Array#forEach iterator method instead of a loop. In that case, you pass a function to be called on each item in the array:

var myStringArray = [ "Hello", "World" ];
myStringArray.forEach( function(s) { 
     // ... do something with s ...
} );

You can of course use an arrow function if your implementation supports ES6+:

myStringArray.forEach( s => { 
     // ... do something with s ...
} );

Unlike for...of, .forEach only calls the function for elements that are actually present in the array. If passed our hypothetical array with three elements and a length of 248, it will only call the function three times, not 248 times. If this is how you want to handle sparse arrays, .forEach may be the way to go even if your interpreter supports for...of.

The final option, which works in all versions of JavaScript, is an explicit counting loop. You simply count from 0 up to one less than the length and use the counter as an index. The basic loop looks like this:

var i, s, myStringArray = [ "Hello", "World" ], len = myStringArray.length;
for (i=0; i<len; ++i) {
  s = myStringArray[i];
  // ... do something with s ...
}

One advantage of this approach is that you can choose how to handle sparse arrays. The above code will run the body of the loop the full length times, with s set to undefined for any missing elements, just like for..of; if you instead want to handle only the actually-present elements of a sparse array, like .forEach, you can add a simple in test on the index:

var i, s, myStringArray = [ "Hello", "World" ], len = myStringArray.length;
for (i=0; i<len; ++i) {
  if (i in myStringArray) {
    s = myStringArray[i];
    // ... do something with s ...
  }
}

Depending on your implementation's optimizations, assigning the length value to the local variable (as opposed to including the full myStringArray.length expression in the loop condition) can make a significant difference in performance since it skips a property lookup each time through. You may see the length caching done in the loop initialization clause, like this:

var i, len, myStringArray = [ "Hello", "World" ];
for (len = myStringArray.length, i=0; i<len; ++i) {

The explicit counting loop also means you have access to the index of each value, should you want it. The index is also passed as an extra parameter to the function you pass to forEach, so you can access it that way as well:

myStringArray.forEach( (s,i) => {
   // ... do something with s and i ...
});

for...of doesn't give you the index associated with each object, but as long as the object you're iterating over is actually an instance of Array (and not one of the other iterable types for..of works on), you can use the Array#entries method to change it to an array of [index, item] pairs, and then iterate over that:

for (const [i, s] of myStringArray.entries()) {
  // ... do something with s and i ...
}

The for...in syntax mentioned by others is for looping over an object's properties; since an Array in JavaScript is just an object with numeric property names (and an automatically-updated length property), you can theoretically loop over an Array with it. But the problem is that it doesn't restrict itself to the numeric property values (remember that even methods are actually just properties whose value is a closure), nor is it guaranteed to iterate over those in numeric order. Therefore, the for...in syntax should not be used for looping through Arrays.

Discussions

How to write for loops with strings in an array [JavaScript]
What are you talking about? An array of strings is exactly the same as an array of numbers. You can do for (let i = 0; i < 4; i++) { console.log(people[i]); } just like you would if it contained something else. An array can even contain a mix of strings, numbers, objects, and other arrays. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/learnprogramming
22
3
May 7, 2023
Javascript: For In loop does not loop through array in order past certain index
What do you think the "safe number" limit is? JavaScript array indexes are limited to 4294967294, and so 9999999999 is larger than that. JavaScript is pretty quirky. When you use indexes larger than that, it doesn't break, but it starts behaving more like an associative array. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/learnprogramming
15
3
August 29, 2022
Impossible to use for loop on arrays without TypeScript whining about undefined elements?
Arrays can have holes. let myArray = [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]; myArray[20] = 3; // now you have 15 holes in there for (let i = 0; i < myArray.length; i++) { let element = myArray[i]; // <--- number | undefined } the complaint is pretty useful in that case. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/typescript
54
16
August 4, 2022
How to pass array to .ejs file then iterate through it.
Try regular for loop and see what happens More on reddit.com
🌐 r/node
8
3
November 6, 2016
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › how to write for loops with strings in an array [javascript]
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: How to write for loops with strings in an array [JavaScript]
May 7, 2023 -

As the title says, I know how to write for loops using numbers, but I have no clue when it comes to strings that have letters. Is it even possible?

For example, how do I write a for loop using this array

let people = ["Greg", "Mary", "Devon", "James"];

I know how to do this one

for (let names of people){
    console.log(names);
}

But while trying to practice other methods, I wasn't able to get the same results.

🌐
Mozilla
developer.mozilla.org › en-US › docs › Web › JavaScript › Guide › Loops_and_iteration
Loops and iteration - JavaScript - MDN Web Docs
You can think of a loop as a ... "Go five steps to the east" could be expressed this way as a loop: ... for (let step = 0; step < 5; step++) { // Runs 5 times, with values of step 0 through 4....
🌐
freeCodeCamp
freecodecamp.org › news › how-to-loop-through-an-array-in-javascript-js-iterate-tutorial
How to Loop Through an Array in JavaScript – JS Iterate Tutorial
November 7, 2024 - The for...of Loop iterates over iterable objects such as arrays, sets, maps, strings, and so on. It has the same syntax as the for...in loop, but instead of getting the key, it gets the element itself. This is one of the easiest methods for looping through an array and was introduced in later versions of JavaScript ES6.
🌐
MDN Web Docs
developer.mozilla.org › en-US › docs › Web › JavaScript › Reference › Statements › for...of
for...of - JavaScript | MDN - Mozilla
The for...of statement executes a loop that operates on a sequence of values sourced from an iterable object. Iterable objects include instances of built-ins such as Array, String, TypedArray, Map, Set, NodeList (and other DOM collections), as well as the arguments object, generators produced ...
Find elsewhere
🌐
W3docs
w3docs.com › javascript
How to Loop through an Array in JavaScript
Whenever you want to iterate over an array, an straight-forward way is to have a for loop iterating over the array's keys, which means iterating over zero to the length of the array.
🌐
CoreUI
coreui.io › blog › how-to-loop-through-an-array-in-javascript
How to loop through an array in JavaScript · CoreUI
July 23, 2024 - The for loop initializes a variable, checks a condition, and increments the variable in each iteration. It’s a straightforward way to loop through an array and access each element using array indexes.
🌐
freeCodeCamp
freecodecamp.org › news › loop-through-arrays-javascript
How to Loop Through Arrays in JavaScript
October 31, 2023 - In this example,The for...of loop iterates through each object (person) in the "people" array and prints a string that includes the person's name and age, creating a well-formatted output. ... One of the strengths of JavaScript is its ability to chain multiple array methods together to achieve more complex tasks efficiently.
🌐
codemahal
codemahal.com › looping-through-array-elements-and-string-characters
Looping through elements in an array and characters in a string — codemahal
If you have been following the ... coding concepts. We can use a for loop to work through each element in an array. We can also use for loops to work through each individual character in a string value....
🌐
SheCodes
shecodes.io › athena › 127609-how-to-convert-an-array-to-a-string-using-loops-in-javascript
[JavaScript] - How to convert an array to a string using loops in JavaScript
Learn how to convert an array to a string using loops in JavaScript by iterating through each element and concatenating them into a string.
🌐
Medium
medium.com › better-programming › how-to-iterate-through-strings-in-javascript-65c51bb3ace5
How to Iterate Through Strings in JavaScript | by Johannes Baum | Better Programming
February 28, 2022 - For many things in JavaScript, there’s not a single way to achieve them. A thing as simple as iterating over each character in a string is one of them. Let’s explore some methods and discuss their upsides and downsides.
🌐
Go Make Things
gomakethings.com › whats-the-best-way-to-loop-over-arrays-and-elements-in-javascript
What's the best way to loop over arrays and elements in JavaScript? | Go Make Things
July 10, 2025 - A more modern approach, you can use for...of to loop through iterable objects. That includes strings, arrays, and other array-like objects such as NodeLists, HTMLCollections, and HTMLFormControlsCollection, but not plain objects ({}).
🌐
freeCodeCamp
freecodecamp.org › news › javascript-for-loop-how-to-loop-through-an-array-in-js
JavaScript For Loop – How to Loop Through an Array in JS
January 30, 2023 - In other words, the loop starts at 0 index, checks the length of the array, prints out the value to the screen, and then increases the variable by 1. The loop prints out the contents of the array one at a time and when it reaches its length, ...
🌐
Medium
medium.com › @jacquiedesrosiers › mastering-javascript-5-ways-to-loop-through-an-array-6ed1b58f55d4
Mastering JavaScript: 5 Ways to Loop Through an Array | by jacquie d.r. | Medium
September 23, 2025 - The outer for loop iterates through the outer array, and the inner for loop iterates through the subarrays so that we can access the elements. Within the inner loop’s body, we are referencing the element at the jdxth position and reassigning ...
🌐
GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › javascript › iterate-over-array-javascript
JavaScript - Iterate Over an Array - GeeksforGeeks
It is a better choice for traversing ... when we have a break or continue statements. ... The forEach() Method calls the provided function once for every array element in the order....
Published   January 15, 2026
🌐
Gitbooks
buzzcoder.gitbooks.io › codecraft-javascript › content › string › loop-through-a-string.html
Loop Through a String · CodeCraft - JavaScript - BuzzCoder
To walk over all the characters of a string, we can use an ordinary for loop, with a loop counter (i) to go through string index from 0 to str.length:
🌐
Codecademy Forums
discuss.codecademy.com › frequently asked questions › javascript faq
FAQ: Loops - Looping through Arrays - Page 5 - JavaScript FAQ - Codecademy Forums
November 7, 2024 - This community-built FAQ covers the “Looping through Arrays” exercise from the lesson “Loops”. Paths and Courses This exercise can be found in the following Codecademy content: Web Development Introduction To Jav…
🌐
W3Schools
w3schools.com › js › js_loop_for.asp
JavaScript for Loop
When let is used to declare the i variable in a loop, the i variable will only be visible within the loop. ... If you want to use W3Schools services as an educational institution, team or enterprise, send us an e-mail: sales@w3schools.com · If you want to report an error, or if you want to make a suggestion, send us an e-mail: help@w3schools.com · HTML Tutorial CSS Tutorial JavaScript Tutorial How To Tutorial SQL Tutorial Python Tutorial W3.CSS Tutorial Bootstrap Tutorial PHP Tutorial Java Tutorial C++ Tutorial jQuery Tutorial