How can I view the structure of an array in JavaScript using alert()
?
11 Answers
A very basic approach is alert(arrayObj.join('\n'))
, which will display each array element in a row.
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5This works great. Replace "arrayObj" with the name of your array. So if your array is named myArray, this is your line of code:
alert(myArray.join('\n'));
Oct 21, 2014 at 23:32
EDIT: Firefox and Google Chrome now have a built-in JSON
object, so you can just say alert(JSON.stringify(myArray))
without needing to use a jQuery plugin. This is not part of the Javascript language spec, so you shouldn't rely on the JSON
object being present in all browsers, but for debugging purposes it's incredibly useful.
I tend to use the jQuery-json plugin as follows:
alert( $.toJSON(myArray) );
This prints the array in a format like
[5, 6, 7, 11]
However, for debugging your Javascript code, I highly recommend Firebug It actually comes with a Javascript console, so you can type out Javascript code for any page and see the results. Things like arrays are already printed in the human-readable form used above.
Firebug also has a debugger, as well as screens for helping you view and debug your HTML and CSS.
pass your js array to the function below and it will do the same as php print_r() function
alert(print_r(your array)); //call it like this
function print_r(arr,level) {
var dumped_text = "";
if(!level) level = 0;
//The padding given at the beginning of the line.
var level_padding = "";
for(var j=0;j<level+1;j++) level_padding += " ";
if(typeof(arr) == 'object') { //Array/Hashes/Objects
for(var item in arr) {
var value = arr[item];
if(typeof(value) == 'object') { //If it is an array,
dumped_text += level_padding + "'" + item + "' ...\n";
dumped_text += print_r(value,level+1);
} else {
dumped_text += level_padding + "'" + item + "' => \"" + value + "\"\n";
}
}
} else { //Stings/Chars/Numbers etc.
dumped_text = "===>"+arr+"<===("+typeof(arr)+")";
}
return dumped_text;
}
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this function make firefox crashed with parsing a UI sortable array. Jan 2, 2013 at 8:13
You can use alert(arrayObj.toSource());
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1Works under Firefox, but not under Safari or MSIE, see stackoverflow.com/questions/1101584/… Dec 20, 2012 at 14:24
I'd recommend using toString().
Ex. alert(array.toString())
, or console.log(array.toString())
For readability purposes you can use: alert(JSON.stringify(someArrayOrObj, '', 4));
More about JSON.stringify().
Example:
let user = {
name: 'John',
age: 30,
roles: {
isAdmin: false,
isEditor: true,
},
};
alert(JSON.stringify(user, '', 4));
Output:
{
"name": "John",
"age": 30,
"roles": {
"isAdmin": false,
"isEditor": true
}
}
If this is for debugging purposes, I would advise you use a JavaScript debugger such as Firebug. It will let you view the entire contents of arrays and much more, including modifying array entries and stepping through code.
If what you want is to show with an alert() the content of an array of objects, i recomend you to define in the object the method toString() so with a simple alert(MyArray); the full content of the array will be shown in the alert.
Here is an example:
//-------------------------------------------------------------------
// Defininf the Point object
function Point(CoordenadaX, CoordenadaY) {
// Sets the point coordinates depending on the parameters defined
switch (arguments.length) {
case 0:
this.x = null;
this.y = null;
break;
case 1:
this.x = CoordenadaX;
this.y = null;
break;
case 2:
this.x = CoordenadaX;
this.y = CoordenadaY;
break;
}
// This adds the toString Method to the point object so the
// point can be printed using alert();
this.toString = function() {
return " (" + this.x + "," + this.y + ") ";
};
}
Then if you have an array of points:
var MyArray = [];
MyArray.push ( new Point(5,6) );
MyArray.push ( new Point(7,9) );
You can print simply calling:
alert(MyArray);
Hope this helps!
You could write a function that will convert and format this array as string. Even better: use FireBug for debugging instead of alerts.
alert($("#form_id").serialize());
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3The question is tagged
javascript
which says "Unless a tag for a framework/library is also included, a pure JavaScript answer is expected". Even if that wasn't the case… the question is asking about an array, not an HTML form.– QuentinJul 18, 2013 at 21:44
console.log
-- it's great for introspection of JavaScript objects.console.debug
would actually work better.