Set.prototype.delete()
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The delete()
method of Set
instances removes the specified value from this set, if it is in the set.
Try it
const set = new Set();
set.add({ x: 10, y: 20 }).add({ x: 20, y: 30 });
// Delete any point with `x > 10`.
set.forEach((point) => {
if (point.x > 10) {
set.delete(point);
}
});
console.log(set.size);
// Expected output: 1
Syntax
js
setInstance.delete(value)
Parameters
Return value
true
if a value in the Set
object has been removed successfully. false
if the value is not found in the Set
.
Examples
>Using delete()
js
const mySet = new Set();
mySet.add("foo");
console.log(mySet.delete("bar")); // false; no "bar" element found to be deleted.
console.log(mySet.delete("foo")); // true; successfully removed.
console.log(mySet.has("foo")); // false; the "foo" element is no longer present.
Deleting an object from a set
Because objects are compared by reference, you have to delete them by checking individual properties if you don't have a reference to the original object.
js
const setObj = new Set(); // Create a new set.
setObj.add({ x: 10, y: 20 }); // Add object in the set.
setObj.add({ x: 20, y: 30 }); // Add object in the set.
// Delete any point with `x > 10`.
setObj.forEach((point) => {
if (point.x > 10) {
setObj.delete(point);
}
});
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-set.prototype.delete> |
Browser compatibility
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