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Home/ Questions/Q 6160079
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T21:14:25+00:00 2026-05-23T21:14:25+00:00

I have two arrays of objects: var a = [ {‘id’: 20}, {‘id’: 15},

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I have two arrays of objects:

var a = [  {'id': 20},   {'id': 15},   {'id': 10},   {'id': 17},   {'id': 23}  ];

var b = [ {'id': 90},   {'id': 15},    {'id': 17},   {'id': 23}  ];  

I’d like to get objects which are in a, but not in b. Results from this example would be:

{'id': 20} and {'id': 10}.

Because the arrays could be large, I need an efficient way to do this.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T21:14:25+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 9:14 pm
    // Make hashtable of ids in B
    var bIds = {}
    b.forEach(function(obj){
        bIds[obj.id] = obj;
    });
    
    // Return all elements in A, unless in B
    return a.filter(function(obj){
        return !(obj.id in bIds);
    });
    

    very minor addendum: If the lists are very large and you wish to avoid the factor of 2 extra memory, you could store the objects in a hashmap in the first place instead of using lists, assuming the ids are unique: a = {20:{etc:...}, 15:{etc:...}, 10:{etc:...}, 17:{etc:...}, 23:{etc:...}}. I’d personally do this. Alternatively: Secondly, javascript sorts lists in-place so it doesn’t use more memory. e.g. a.sort((x,y)=>x.id-y.id) Sorting would be worse than the above because it’s O(N log(N)). But if you had to sort it anyway, there is an O(N) algorithm that involves two sorted lists: namely, you consider both lists together, and repeatedly take the leftmost (smallest) element from the lists (that is examine, then increment a pointer/bookmark from the list you took). This is just like merge sort but with a little bit more care to find identical items… and maybe pesky to code. Thirdly, if the lists are legacy code and you want to convert it to a hashmap without memory overhead, you can also do so element-by-element by repeatedly popping the elements off of the lists and into hashmaps.

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