ArrayBuffer - JavaScript | MDN (original) (raw)
Description
Resizing ArrayBuffers
ArrayBuffer objects can be made resizable by including the maxByteLength option when calling the ArrayBuffer() constructor. You can query whether an ArrayBuffer is resizable and what its maximum size is by accessing its resizable and maxByteLength properties, respectively. You can assign a new size to a resizable ArrayBuffer with a resize() call. New bytes are initialized to 0.
These features make resizing ArrayBuffers more efficient — otherwise, you have to make a copy of the buffer with a new size. It also gives JavaScript parity with WebAssembly in this regard (Wasm linear memory can be resized with WebAssembly.Memory.prototype.grow()).
Transferring ArrayBuffers
ArrayBuffer objects can be transferred between different execution contexts, like Web Workers or Service Workers, using the structured clone algorithm. This is done by passing the ArrayBuffer as a transferable object in a call to Worker.postMessage() or ServiceWorker.postMessage(). In pure JavaScript, you can also transfer the ownership of memory from one ArrayBuffer to another using its transfer() or transferToFixedLength() method.
When an ArrayBuffer is transferred, its original copy becomes detached — this means it is no longer usable. At any moment, there will only be one copy of the ArrayBuffer that actually has access to the underlying memory. Detached buffers have the following behaviors:
- byteLength becomes 0 (in both the buffer and the associated typed array views).
- Methods, such as resize() and slice(), throw a TypeError when invoked. The associated typed array views' methods also throw a
TypeError.
You can check whether an ArrayBuffer is detached by its detached property.
Constructor
Creates a new ArrayBuffer object.
Static properties
The constructor function that is used to create derived objects.
Static methods
Returns true if arg is one of the ArrayBuffer views, such as typed array objects or a DataView. Returns false otherwise.
Instance properties
These properties are defined on ArrayBuffer.prototype and shared by all ArrayBuffer instances.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.byteLength
The size, in bytes, of the ArrayBuffer. This is established when the array is constructed and can only be changed using the ArrayBuffer.prototype.resize() method if the ArrayBuffer is resizable.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.constructor
The constructor function that created the instance object. For ArrayBuffer instances, the initial value is the ArrayBuffer constructor.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.detached
Read-only. Returns true if the ArrayBuffer has been detached (transferred), or false if not.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.maxByteLength
The read-only maximum length, in bytes, that the ArrayBuffer can be resized to. This is established when the array is constructed and cannot be changed.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.resizable
Read-only. Returns true if the ArrayBuffer can be resized, or false if not.
ArrayBuffer.prototype[Symbol.toStringTag]
The initial value of the [Symbol.toStringTag] property is the string "ArrayBuffer". This property is used in Object.prototype.toString().
Instance methods
ArrayBuffer.prototype.resize()
Resizes the ArrayBuffer to the specified size, in bytes.
Returns a new ArrayBuffer whose contents are a copy of this ArrayBuffer's bytes from begin (inclusive) up to end (exclusive). If either begin or end is negative, it refers to an index from the end of the array, as opposed to from the beginning.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.transfer()
Creates a new ArrayBuffer with the same byte content as this buffer, then detaches this buffer.
ArrayBuffer.prototype.transferToFixedLength()
Creates a new non-resizable ArrayBuffer with the same byte content as this buffer, then detaches this buffer.
Examples
Creating an ArrayBuffer
In this example, we create a 8-byte buffer with an Int32Array view referring to the buffer:
const buffer = new ArrayBuffer(8);
const view = new Int32Array(buffer);
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification # sec-arraybuffer-objects |