• JavaScript
  • JavaScript
  • Tutorials and guides
  • Beginner's tutorials
    1. JavaScript Guide
      1. Loops and iteration
      2. Representing dates & times
      3. Working with objects
      4. Iterators and generators
      5. Asynchronous JavaScript
      6. Equality comparisons and sameness
      7. Meta programming
      8. AggregateError
      9. AsyncGenerator
      10. BigInt
      11. DataView
      12. encodeURI()
      13. escape() Deprecated
      14. Float16Array
      15. Generator
      16. Int8Array
      17. InternalError Non-standard
      18. Iterator
      19. NaN
      20. parseInt()
      21. ReferenceError
      22. SharedArrayBuffer
      23. Temporal Experimental
      24. Uint8ClampedArray
      25. unescape() Deprecated
      26. WeakSet
  • Assignment (=)
  • Bitwise AND (&)
  • Bitwise OR assignment (|=)
  • Comma operator (,)
  • Destructuring
  • Exponentiation (**)
  • Greater than (>)
  • import.meta.resolve()
  • Inequality (!=)
  • Less than (<)
  • Logical NOT (!)
  • Multiplication assignment (*=)
  • Nullish coalescing assignment (??=)
  • Optional chaining (?.)
  • Right shift (>>)
  • Strict inequality (!==)
  • this
  • Unsigned right shift (>>>)
  • yield*
  • Block statement
  • continue
  • export
  • for...in
  • if...else
  • let
  • try...catch
  • with Deprecated
  • get
  • The arguments object
    1. callee Deprecated
    2. extends
    3. Static initialization blocks
  • Character class escape: \d, \D, \w, \W, \s, \S
  • Input boundary assertion: ^, $
  • Modifier: (?ims-ims:...)
  • Quantifier: *, +, ?, {n}, {n,}, {n,m}
  • Errors
    1. RangeError: argument is not a valid code point
    2. RangeError: invalid array length
    3. RangeError: repeat count must be less than infinity
    4. ReferenceError: assignment to undeclared variable "x"
    5. SyntaxError: 'arguments'/'eval' can't be defined or assigned to in strict mode code
    6. SyntaxError: \ at end of pattern
    7. SyntaxError: await is only valid in async functions, async generators and modules
    8. SyntaxError: continue must be inside loop
    9. SyntaxError: function statement requires a name
    10. SyntaxError: identifier starts immediately after numeric literal
    11. SyntaxError: invalid assignment left-hand side
    12. SyntaxError: invalid class set operation in regular expression
    13. SyntaxError: invalid property name in regular expression
    14. SyntaxError: invalid unicode escape in regular expression
    15. SyntaxError: missing ) after argument list
    16. SyntaxError: missing } after property list
    17. SyntaxError: missing variable name
    18. SyntaxError: numbers out of order in {} quantifier.
    19. SyntaxError: property name __proto__ appears more than once in object literal
    20. SyntaxError: rest parameter may not have a default
    21. SyntaxError: super() is only valid in derived class constructors
    22. SyntaxError: unlabeled break must be inside loop or switch
    23. TypeError: 'caller', 'callee', and 'arguments' properties may not be accessed
    24. TypeError: "x" is not a function
    25. TypeError: BigInt value can't be serialized in JSON
    26. TypeError: can't convert BigInt to number
    27. TypeError: can't redefine non-configurable property "x"
    28. TypeError: class constructors must be invoked with 'new'
    29. TypeError: Initializing an object twice is an error with private fields/methods
    30. TypeError: Iterator/AsyncIterator constructor can't be used directly
    31. TypeError: property "x" is non-configurable and can't be deleted
    32. TypeError: X.prototype.y called on incompatible type
    33. JavaScript technologies overview
    34. Strict mode
    35. Learn more
    36. See full compatibility
    37. variadic functions in JavaScript.

  • Try it

    function sum(...theArgs) {
      let total = 0;
      for (const arg of theArgs) {
        total += arg;
      }
      return total;
    }
    
    console.log(sum(1, 2, 3));
    / Expected output: 6
    
    console.log(sum(1, 2, 3, 4));
    / Expected output: 10
    

    Syntax

    js
    function f(a, b, ...theArgs) {
      / …
    }
    

    There are some additional syntax restrictions:

    • A function definition can only have one rest parameter.
    • The rest parameter must be the last parameter in the function definition.
    • Trailing commas are not allowed after the rest parameter.
    • The rest parameter cannot have a default value.

    Description

    A function definition's last parameter can be prefixed with ... (three U+002E FULL STOP characters), which will cause all remaining (user supplied) parameters to be placed within an Array object.

    js
    function myFun(a, b, ...manyMoreArgs) {
      console.log("a", a);
      console.log("b", b);
      console.log("manyMoreArgs", manyMoreArgs);
    }
    
    myFun("one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six");
    
    / Console Output:
    / a, one
    / b, two
    / manyMoreArgs, ["three", "four", "five", "six"]
    

    The rest parameter may be destructured, which allows you to ignore certain parameter positions.

    js
    function ignoreFirst(...[, b, c]) {
      return b + c;
    }
    

    However, the following are all syntax errors:

    js
    function wrong1(...one, ...wrong) {}
    function wrong2(...wrong, arg2, arg3) {}
    function wrong3(...wrong,) {}
    function wrong4(...wrong = []) {}
    

    The rest parameter is not counted towards the function's arguments object:

    • The arguments object is not a real array, while rest parameters are forEach() or pop() can be applied on it directly.
    • The arguments object has the additional (deprecated) callee property.
    • In a non-strict function with simple parameters, the arguments object syncs its indices with the values of parameters. The rest parameter array never updates its value when the named parameters are re-assigned.
    • The rest parameter bundles all the extra parameters into a single array, but does not contain any named argument defined before the ...restParam. The arguments object contains all of the parameters — including the parameters in the ...restParam array — bundled into one array-like object.

    Examples

    Using rest parameters

    In this example, the first argument is mapped to a and the second to b, so these named arguments are used as normal.

    However, the third argument, manyMoreArgs, will be an array that contains the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, …, nth — as many arguments as the user specifies.

    js
    function myFun(a, b, ...manyMoreArgs) {
      console.log("a", a);
      console.log("b", b);
      console.log("manyMoreArgs", manyMoreArgs);
    }
    
    myFun("one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six");
    
    / a, "one"
    / b, "two"
    / manyMoreArgs, ["three", "four", "five", "six"] <-- an array
    

    Below, even though there is just one value, the last argument still gets put into an array.

    js
    / Using the same function definition from example above
    
    myFun("one", "two", "three");
    
    / a, "one"
    / b, "two"
    / manyMoreArgs, ["three"] <-- an array with just one value
    

    Below, the third argument isn't provided, but manyMoreArgs is still an array (albeit an empty one).

    js
    / Using the same function definition from example above
    
    myFun("one", "two");
    
    / a, "one"
    / b, "two"
    / manyMoreArgs, [] <-- still an array
    

    Below, only one argument is provided, so b gets the default value undefined, but manyMoreArgs is still an empty array.

    js
    / Using the same function definition from example above
    
    myFun("one");
    
    / a, "one"
    / b, undefined
    / manyMoreArgs, [] <-- still an array
    

    Argument length

    Since theArgs is an array, a count of its elements is given by the arguments.length.

    js
    function fun1(...theArgs) {
      console.log(theArgs.length);
    }
    
    fun1(); / 0
    fun1(5); / 1
    fun1(5, 6, 7); / 3
    

    Using rest parameters in combination with ordinary parameters

    In the next example, a rest parameter is used to collect all parameters after the first parameter into an array. Each one of the parameter values collected into the array is then multiplied by the first parameter, and the array is returned:

    js
    function multiply(multiplier, ...theArgs) {
      return theArgs.map((element) => multiplier * element);
    }
    
    const arr = multiply(2, 15, 25, 42);
    console.log(arr); / [30, 50, 84]
    

    From arguments to an array

    Array methods can be used on rest parameters, but not on the arguments object:

    js
    function sortRestArgs(...theArgs) {
      const sortedArgs = theArgs.sort();
      return sortedArgs;
    }
    
    console.log(sortRestArgs(5, 3, 7, 1)); / 1, 3, 5, 7
    
    function sortArguments() {
      const sortedArgs = arguments.sort();
      return sortedArgs; / this will never happen
    }
    
    console.log(sortArguments(5, 3, 7, 1));
    / throws a TypeError (arguments.sort is not a function)
    

    Rest parameters were introduced to reduce the boilerplate code that was commonly used for converting a set of arguments to an array.

    Before rest parameters, arguments need to be converted to a normal array before calling array methods on them:

    js
    function fn(a, b) {
      const normalArray = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments);
      / — or —
      const normalArray2 = [].slice.call(arguments);
      / — or —
      const normalArrayFrom = Array.from(arguments);
    
      const first = normalArray.shift(); / OK, gives the first argument
      const firstBad = arguments.shift(); / ERROR (arguments is not a normal array)
    }
    

    Now, you can easily gain access to a normal array using a rest parameter:

    js
    function fn(...args) {
      const normalArray = args;
      const first = normalArray.shift(); / OK, gives the first argument
    }
    

    Specifications

    Specification
    ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification
    # sec-function-definitions

    Browser compatibility

    See also