The repeat() method constructs and returns a new string which contains the specified number of copies of the string on which it was called, concatenated together.
str.repeat(count)
count'abc'.repeat(-1); // RangeError
'abc'.repeat(0); // ''
'abc'.repeat(1); // 'abc'
'abc'.repeat(2); // 'abcabc'
'abc'.repeat(3.5); // 'abcabcabc' (count will be converted to integer)
'abc'.repeat(1/0); // RangeError
({ toString: () => 'abc', repeat: str.repeat }).repeat(2);
// 'abcabc' (repeat() is a generic method)
This method has been added to the ECMAScript 6 specification and may not be available in all JavaScript implementations yet. However, you can polyfill str.repeat() with the following snippet:
if (!str.repeat) {
str.repeat = function(count) {
'use strict';
if (this == null) {
throw new TypeError('can\'t convert ' + this + ' to object');
}
var str = '' + this;
count = +count;
if (count != count) {
count = 0;
}
if (count < 0) {
throw new RangeError('repeat count must be non-negative');
}
if (count == Infinity) {
throw new RangeError('repeat count must be less than infinity');
}
count = Math.floor(count);
if (str.length == 0 || count == 0) {
return '';
}
// Ensuring count is a 31-bit integer allows us to heavily optimize the
// main part. But anyway, most current (August 2014) browsers can't handle
// strings 1 << 28 chars or longer, so:
if (str.length * count >= 1 << 28) {
throw new RangeError('repeat count must not overflow maximum string size');
}
var rpt = '';
for (;;) {
if ((count & 1) == 1) {
rpt += str;
}
count >>>= 1;
if (count == 0) {
break;
}
str += str;
}
return rpt;
}
}
Created by Mozilla Contributors, license: CC-BY-SA 2.5