7

I have an array as my keypath using indexedDB and it works fine with Chrome and Firefox, but when I try to add/put using IE it gives me a DataError.

var request = window.indexedDB.open("MyTestDatabase");

request.onsuccess = function(event) {
    var database = event.target.result;
    var transaction = database.transaction(["document"], "readwrite");
    var objectStore = transaction.objectStore("document");
    var request = objectStore.put({title: 'MyDoc', version: 0});
    request.onsuccess = function() {
        console.log('document added');
    };
    request.error = function(error) {
        console.log(JSON.stringify(error));
    };                
    transaction.oncomplete = function() {
        console.log('transaction complete');
    };
    transaction.onerror = function(error) {
        console.log(JSON.stringify(error));
    };
};

request.onupgradeneeded = function(event) {
    event.target.result.createObjectStore("document", {keyPath: ['title', 'version']});
};

Error Screenshot:

enter image description here

How can I keep my double keyPath and get it to work with IE?

3
  • Please file issue to Microsoft. I have one luck of idb issue being fixed in ie10 after reported. It take a month just to ack issue. Chrome team ack issue in one day and very easy to create one. MS bug reporting is horribly lengthy. Another pending one is nested keyPath. I think multiEntry dont work too.
    – Kyaw Tun
    Dec 21, 2013 at 1:41
  • Yikes, sounds like I'll be be reworking my database to not use an array as a key.
    – Joshua
    Dec 21, 2013 at 22:36
  • Yeah, but you can encode array key to string as it does in Firefox IDB implementation or similarly in my lib bitbucket.org/ytkyaw/ydn-db/src/master/src/ydn/db/base/utils.js
    – Kyaw Tun
    Dec 22, 2013 at 8:17

1 Answer 1

2

The only way to get around this at the moment is to create a string out of the array and use it at the key as Kyaw mentioned.

request.onupgradeneeded = function(event) {
    event.target.result.createObjectStore("document", {keyPath: ['id']});
};

The id in the example would now have to be a concatenated string containing the title and version. Some like: MyDoc_0. You'd still store the title and version fields though so you can easily access them without have to split the id string.

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