Set.prototype.intersection()
Baseline
2024
Newly available
Since June 2024, this feature works across the latest devices and browser versions. This feature might not work in older devices or browsers.
The intersection() method of Set instances takes a set and returns a new set containing elements in both this set and the given set.
Syntax
intersection(other)
Parameters
Return value
A new Set object containing elements in both this set and the other set.
Description
In mathematical notation, intersection is defined as:
And using Venn diagram:
intersection() accepts set-like objects as the other parameter. It requires this to be an actual Set instance, because it directly retrieves the underlying data stored in this without invoking any user code. Then, its behavior depends on the sizes of this and other:
- If there are more elements in
thisthanother.size, then it iterates overotherby calling itskeys()method, and constructs a new set with all elements produced that are also present inthis. - Otherwise, it iterates over the elements in
this, and constructs a new set with all elementseinthisthat causeother.has(e)to return a truthy value.
Because of this implementation, the efficiency of intersection() mostly depends on the size of the smaller set between this and other (assuming sets can be accessed in sublinear time). The order of elements in the returned set is the same as that of the smaller of this and other.
Examples
>Using intersection()
The following example computes the intersection between the set of odd numbers (<10) and the set of perfect squares (<10). The result is the set of odd numbers that are perfect squares.
const odds = new Set([1, 3, 5, 7, 9]);
const squares = new Set([1, 4, 9]);
console.log(odds.intersection(squares)); // Set(2) { 1, 9 }
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-set.prototype.intersection> |
Browser compatibility
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