head()
head<
T>(array):T|undefined
Gets the first element of array.
Alias for first.
DEPRECATED
Use array[0] or array.at(0) directly instead.
Reason:
Alias of first
Type Parameters
T: T
The type of elements in the array.
Parameters
array: T[]
The array to query.
Returns: T | undefined
The first element of the array, or undefined if empty.
See Also
Since
2.0.0
Also known as
at(arr, 0) (Antfu) · first (Remeda, Radashi) · head (Lodash, es-toolkit, Ramda, Effect) · ❌ (Modern Dash)
Example
const numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// ❌ Deprecated approach
const firstElement = head(numbers);
console.log(firstElement); // 1
// ✅ Recommended approach
const firstNative = numbers[0];
console.log(firstNative); // 1
// ✅ Modern approach with ES2022
const firstModern = numbers.at(0);
console.log(firstModern); // 1
How it works?
Gets the first element of an array.
Deprecated: Use array[0] or array.at(0) directly.
Empty Array
Native Equivalent
// ❌ head(arr)
// ✅ arr[0]
// ✅ arr.at(0)
Use Cases
Get first element 📌
Get the first element of an array.
const items = [1, 2, 3, 4];
items[0];
// => 1
Get element at position
Access element at a specific index.
const items = ["a", "b", "c", "d"];
items[2];
// => "c"
Get element from end
Access elements from the end using negative index.
const items = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
items.at(-2);
// => 4