Iterator.prototype.reduce()
Baseline
2025
Newly available
Since March 2025, this feature works across the latest devices and browser versions. This feature might not work in older devices or browsers.
The reduce() method of Iterator instances is similar to Array.prototype.reduce: it executes a user-supplied "reducer" callback function on each element produced by the iterator, passing in the return value from the calculation on the preceding element. The final result of running the reducer across all elements is a single value.
Syntax
reduce(callbackFn)
reduce(callbackFn, initialValue)
Parameters
callbackFn-
A function to execute for each element produced by the iterator. Its return value becomes the value of the
accumulatorparameter on the next invocation ofcallbackFn. For the last invocation, the return value becomes the return value ofreduce(). The function is called with the following arguments:accumulator-
The value resulting from the previous call to
callbackFn. On the first call, its value isinitialValueif the latter is specified; otherwise its value is the first element of the iterator. currentValue-
The value of the current element. On the first call, its value is the first element of the iterator if
initialValueis specified; otherwise its value is the second element. currentIndex-
The index position of
currentValue. On the first call, its value is0ifinitialValueis specified, otherwise1.
initialValueOptional-
A value to which
accumulatoris initialized the first time the callback is called. IfinitialValueis specified,callbackFnstarts executing with the first element ascurrentValue. IfinitialValueis not specified,accumulatoris initialized to the first element, andcallbackFnstarts executing with the second element ascurrentValue. In this case, if the iterator is empty (so that there's no first value to return asaccumulator), an error is thrown.
Return value
The value that results from running the "reducer" callback function to completion over the entire iterator.
Exceptions
TypeError-
Thrown if the iterator contains no elements and
initialValueis not provided.
Description
See Array.prototype.reduce() for details about how reduce() works. Unlike most other iterator helper methods, it does not work well with infinite iterators, because it is not lazy.
Examples
>Using reduce()
The following example creates an iterator that yields terms in the Fibonacci sequence, and then sums the first ten terms:
function* fibonacci() {
let current = 1;
let next = 1;
while (true) {
yield current;
[current, next] = [next, current + next];
}
}
console.log(
fibonacci()
.take(10)
.reduce((a, b) => a + b),
); // 143
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-iterator.prototype.reduce> |
Browser compatibility
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