587

Reproducing the problem

I'm running into an issue when trying to pass error messages around using web sockets. I can replicate the issue I am facing using JSON.stringify to cater to a wider audience:

// node v0.10.15
> var error = new Error('simple error message');
    undefined

> error
    [Error: simple error message]

> Object.getOwnPropertyNames(error);
    [ 'stack', 'arguments', 'type', 'message' ]

> JSON.stringify(error);
    '{}'

The problem is that I end up with an empty object.

What I've tried

Browsers

I first tried leaving node.js and running it in various browsers. Chrome version 28 gives me the same result, and interestingly enough, Firefox at least makes an attempt but left out the message:

>>> JSON.stringify(error); // Firebug, Firefox 23
{"fileName":"debug eval code","lineNumber":1,"stack":"@debug eval code:1\n"}

Replacer function

I then looked at the Error.prototype. It shows that the prototype contains methods such as toString and toSource. Knowing that functions can't be stringified, I included a replacer function when calling JSON.stringify to remove all functions, but then realized that it too had some weird behavior:

var error = new Error('simple error message');
JSON.stringify(error, function(key, value) {
    console.log(key === ''); // true (?)
    console.log(value === error); // true (?)
});

It doesn't seem to loop over the object as it normally would, and therefore I can't check if the key is a function and ignore it.

The Question

Is there any way to stringify native Error messages with JSON.stringify? If not, why does this behavior occur?

Methods of getting around this

  • Stick with simple string-based error messages, or create personal error objects and don't rely on the native Error object.
  • Pull properties: JSON.stringify({ message: error.message, stack: error.stack })

Updates

@Ray Toal Suggested in a comment that I take a look at the property descriptors. It is clear now why it does not work:

var error = new Error('simple error message');
var propertyNames = Object.getOwnPropertyNames(error);
var descriptor;
for (var property, i = 0, len = propertyNames.length; i < len; ++i) {
    property = propertyNames[i];
    descriptor = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(error, property);
    console.log(property, descriptor);
}

Output:

stack { get: [Function],
  set: [Function],
  enumerable: false,
  configurable: true }
arguments { value: undefined,
  writable: true,
  enumerable: false,
  configurable: true }
type { value: undefined,
  writable: true,
  enumerable: false,
  configurable: true }
message { value: 'simple error message',
  writable: true,
  enumerable: false,
  configurable: true }

Key: enumerable: false.

Accepted answer provides a workaround for this problem.

3
  • 6
    Have you examined the property descriptors for the properties in the error object?
    – Ray Toal
    Aug 22, 2013 at 21:37
  • 5
    The question for me was 'why', and I found the answer was at the bottom of the question. There's nothing wrong with posting an answer for your own question, and you'll probably get more cred that way. :-) Dec 1, 2014 at 5:04
  • 1
    The serialize-error package handles this for you: npmjs.com/package/serialize-error Aug 24, 2020 at 20:06

15 Answers 15

505
JSON.stringify(err, Object.getOwnPropertyNames(err))

seems to work

[from a comment by /u/ub3rgeek on /r/javascript] and felixfbecker's comment below

Also see the answer by "Sanghyun Lee" for an explanation why this is required.

8
  • 78
    Combing the answers, JSON.stringify(err, Object.getOwnPropertyNames(err)) Jan 6, 2016 at 13:47
  • 11
    This works fine for a native ExpressJS Error object, but it will not work with a Mongoose error. Mongoose errors have nested objects for ValidationError types. This will not stringify the nested errors object in a Mongoose error object of type ValidationError. Mar 14, 2016 at 22:49
  • 5
    this should be the answer, because it's the simplest way to do this.
    – Huan
    Oct 6, 2016 at 10:23
  • 12
    @felixfbecker That only looks for property names one level deep. If you have var spam = { a: 1, b: { b: 2, b2: 3} }; and run Object.getOwnPropertyNames(spam), you'll get ["a", "b"] -- deceptive here, because the b object has it's own b. You'd get both in your stringify call, but you'd miss spam.b.b2. That's bad.
    – ruffin
    Jun 2, 2017 at 15:07
  • 3
    @ruffin that's true, but it might even be desirable. I think what OP wanted was just to make sure message and stack are included in the JSON. Jul 23, 2017 at 15:37
254

You can define a Error.prototype.toJSON to retrieve a plain Object representing the Error:

if (!('toJSON' in Error.prototype))
Object.defineProperty(Error.prototype, 'toJSON', {
    value: function () {
        var alt = {};

        Object.getOwnPropertyNames(this).forEach(function (key) {
            alt[key] = this[key];
        }, this);

        return alt;
    },
    configurable: true,
    writable: true
});
var error = new Error('testing');
error.detail = 'foo bar';

console.log(JSON.stringify(error));
// {"message":"testing","detail":"foo bar"}

Using Object.defineProperty() adds toJSON without it being an enumerable property itself.


Regarding modifying Error.prototype, while toJSON() may not be defined for Errors specifically, the method is still standardized for objects in general (ref: step 3). So, the risk of collisions or conflicts is minimal.

Though, to still avoid it completely, JSON.stringify()'s replacer parameter can be used instead:

function replaceErrors(key, value) {
    if (value instanceof Error) {
        var error = {};

        Object.getOwnPropertyNames(value).forEach(function (propName) {
            error[propName] = value[propName];
        });

        return error;
    }

    return value;
}

var error = new Error('testing');
error.detail = 'foo bar';

console.log(JSON.stringify(error, replaceErrors));
10
  • 4
    If you use .getOwnPropertyNames() instead of .keys(), you'll get the non-enumerable properties without having to manually define them.
    – user2437417
    Aug 22, 2013 at 21:56
  • 9
    Better not addit to the Error.prototype, can give issues when in a future version of JavaScrip the Error.prototype actually has a toJSON function. Dec 2, 2014 at 11:34
  • 5
    Careful! This solution breaks error handling in native node mongodb driver: jira.mongodb.org/browse/NODE-554 Feb 25, 2016 at 15:34
  • 5
    In case anyone pays attention to their linker errors and naming conflicts: if using the replacer option, you should choose a different parameter name for key in function replaceErrors(key, value) to avoid naming conflict with .forEach(function (key) { .. }); the replaceErrors key parameter is unused in this answer. Apr 20, 2017 at 22:58
  • 2
    The shadowing of key in this example, while allowed, is potentially confusing as it leaves doubt as to whether the author intended to refer to the outer variable or not. propName would be a more expressive choice for the inner loop. (BTW, I think @404NotFound meant "linter" (static analysis tool) not "linker") In any case, using a custom replacer function is an excellent solution for this as it solves the problem in one, appropriate place and does not alter native/global behavior.
    – jacobq
    Sep 20, 2019 at 13:15
232

As no one is talking about the why part, I'm gonna answer it.

Why this JSON.stringify returns an empty object?

> JSON.stringify(error);
'{}'

Answer

From the document of JSON.stringify(),

For all the other Object instances (including Map, Set, WeakMap and WeakSet), only their enumerable properties will be serialized.

and Error object doesn't have any enumerable properties, that's why it prints an empty object.

Background on enumerable properties

In Javascript, an object can have two types of properties:

  • enumerable properties
  • non-enumerable properties

The exact distinction is a bit tricky, but basically:

  • "normal" properties, such as the ones you create by assignment ( myobj= {}; myobj.prop1 = 4711;), are enumerable,
  • "internal" properties, such as the length property of an array, are non-enumerable

In particular, an Error has only non-enumerable properties.

For details, see for example Enumerability and ownership of properties on MDN.

4
  • 24
    Strange no one even bothered. As long as fix works I assume :) Aug 6, 2018 at 12:02
  • 2
    The first part of this answer is not correct. There is a way to use JSON.stringify using its replacer parameter. Jun 1, 2019 at 21:37
  • 2
    @ToddChaffee that's a good point. I've fixed my answer. Please check it and feel free to improve it. Thanks. Jun 2, 2019 at 9:20
  • 9
    This doesn't really answer the question though. Why was it decided then to make the Error objects properties not enumerable? What is the rationale behind that? It's inconsistent, confusing and yet another JS pothole to watch out for as if there weren't enough already. May 20, 2021 at 20:02
94

There is a great Node.js package for that: serialize-error.

npm install serialize-error

It handles well even nested Error objects.

import {serializeError} from 'serialize-error';

const stringifiedError = serializeError(error);

Docs: https://www.npmjs.com/package/serialize-error

6
  • No, but it can be transpiled to do so. See this comment.
    – jacobq
    Sep 20, 2019 at 13:59
  • 21
    This is the correct answer. Serializing errors is not a trivial problem, and the author of the library (an excellent dev with many highly popular packages) went to significant lengths to handle edge cases, as can be seen in the README: "Custom properties are preserved. Non-enumerable properties are kept non-enumerable (name, message, stack). Enumerable properties are kept enumerable (all properties besides the non-enumerable ones). Circular references are handled." May 19, 2020 at 5:04
  • 2
    @DanDascalescu thanks, that's a great package! It works on nested properties that are Errors, replaces buffers, and removes circular reference exceptions! This should be the answer.
    – ps2goat
    Jul 12, 2021 at 20:41
  • 2
    as of the serialize-error package docs - I don't think the JSON.stringify() part is needed. Mar 7, 2022 at 21:34
  • serializeError(error) doesn't return a string. It returns an ErrorObject
    – Usama
    Jan 29 at 19:34
69

Modifying Jonathan's great answer to avoid monkey patching:

var stringifyError = function(err, filter, space) {
  var plainObject = {};
  Object.getOwnPropertyNames(err).forEach(function(key) {
    plainObject[key] = err[key];
  });
  return JSON.stringify(plainObject, filter, space);
};

var error = new Error('testing');
error.detail = 'foo bar';

console.log(stringifyError(error, null, '\t'));
3
  • 10
    First time I've heard monkey patching :) Jun 18, 2016 at 17:27
  • 2
    @ChrisPrince But it won't be the last time, esp in JavaScript! Here's Wikipedia on Monkey Patching, just for future folks' info. (In Jonathan's answer, as Chris understands, you're adding a new function, toJSON, directly to Error's prototype, which is often not a great idea. Maybe someone else already has, which this checks, but then you don't know what that other version does. Or if someone unexpectedly gets yours, or assumes Error's prototype has specific properties, things could bork.)
    – ruffin
    Jun 6, 2017 at 15:22
  • 1
    this is nice, but omits the stack of the error (which is shown in the console). not sure of the details, if this is Vue-related or what, just wanted to mention this.
    – phil294
    Mar 13, 2019 at 23:54
18

We needed to serialise an arbitrary object hierarchy, where the root or any of the nested properties in the hierarchy could be instances of Error.

Our solution was to use the replacer param of JSON.stringify(), e.g.:

function jsonFriendlyErrorReplacer(key, value) {
  if (value instanceof Error) {
    return {
      // Pull all enumerable properties, supporting properties on custom Errors
      ...value,
      // Explicitly pull Error's non-enumerable properties
      name: value.name,
      message: value.message,
      stack: value.stack,
    }
  }

  return value
}

let obj = {
    error: new Error('nested error message')
}

console.log('Result WITHOUT custom replacer:', JSON.stringify(obj))
console.log('Result WITH custom replacer:', JSON.stringify(obj, jsonFriendlyErrorReplacer))

1
  • 1
    5 years after your post, and I had to scroll through the answers to find this one, but man is this a great solution! Works flawlessly. Oct 17, 2023 at 7:45
13

I was working on a JSON format for log appenders and ended up here trying to solve a similar problem. After a while, I realized I could just make Node do the work:

const util = require("util");
...
return JSON.stringify(obj, (name, value) => {
    if (value instanceof Error) {
        return util.format(value);
    } else {
        return value;
    }
}
4
  • 1
    It should be instanceof and not instanceOf. Apr 22, 2020 at 9:59
  • it looks like that only formats the message, not other properties. I was missing the stack property from my error when using this.
    – ps2goat
    Jul 9, 2021 at 21:56
  • I've tried this on node 6 through 16. I get stack traces in all of them, @ps2goat what version are you using?
    – Jason
    Jul 12, 2021 at 22:44
  • I'm using 16.0.4, but I found my issue. I missed the name parameter to the formatter function. After fixing it, this solution still strings all properties together. name: message: stacktrace. The serialize-error package seems to be a better fit if you want to retain the structure of the error object and prevent a few other issues (logging buffers, circular references, etc.)
    – ps2goat
    Jul 13, 2021 at 15:02
10

If using nodejs there is better reliable way by using native nodejs inspect. As well you can specify to print objects to unlimited depth.

Typescript example:

import { inspect }  from "util";

const myObject = new Error("This is error");
console.log(JSON.stringify(myObject)); // Will print {}
console.log(myObject); // Will print full error object
console.log(inspect(myObject, {depth: null})); // Same output as console.log plus it works as well for objects with many nested properties.

Link to documentation, link to example usage.

And as well discussed in the topic How can I get the full object in Node.js's console.log(), rather than '[Object]'? here in stack overflow.

9

You can also just redefine those non-enumerable properties to be enumerable.

Object.defineProperty(Error.prototype, 'message', {
    configurable: true,
    enumerable: true
});

and maybe stack property too.

1
  • 21
    Don't change objects you don't own, it can break other parts of your application and good luck finding why.
    – fregante
    Mar 17, 2019 at 4:58
7

String constructor should be able to stringify error

try { 
  throw new Error("MY ERROR MSG")
} catch (e) {
  String(e) // returns 'Error: MY ERROR MSG'
}
1
  • 2
    I don't know why you've been downvoted, your answer was useful to me.
    – Moebius
    Mar 15, 2022 at 8:54
6

None of the answers above seemed to properly serialize properties which are on the prototype of Error (because getOwnPropertyNames() does not include inherited properties). I was also not able to redefine the properties like one of the answers suggested.

This is the solution I came up with - it uses lodash but you could replace lodash with generic versions of those functions.

 function recursivePropertyFinder(obj){
    if( obj === Object.prototype){
        return {};
    }else{
        return _.reduce(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(obj), 
            function copy(result, value, key) {
                if( !_.isFunction(obj[value])){
                    if( _.isObject(obj[value])){
                        result[value] = recursivePropertyFinder(obj[value]);
                    }else{
                        result[value] = obj[value];
                    }
                }
                return result;
            }, recursivePropertyFinder(Object.getPrototypeOf(obj)));
    }
}


Error.prototype.toJSON = function(){
    return recursivePropertyFinder(this);
}

Here's the test I did in Chrome:

var myError = Error('hello');
myError.causedBy = Error('error2');
myError.causedBy.causedBy = Error('error3');
myError.causedBy.causedBy.displayed = true;
JSON.stringify(myError);

{"name":"Error","message":"hello","stack":"Error: hello\n    at <anonymous>:66:15","causedBy":{"name":"Error","message":"error2","stack":"Error: error2\n    at <anonymous>:67:20","causedBy":{"name":"Error","message":"error3","stack":"Error: error3\n    at <anonymous>:68:29","displayed":true}}}  
5

Just convert to a regular object

// example error
let err = new Error('I errored')

// one liner converting Error into regular object that can be stringified
err = Object.getOwnPropertyNames(err).reduce((acc, key) => { acc[key] = err[key]; return acc; }, {})

If you want to send this object from child process, worker or though the network there's no need to stringify. It will be automatically stringified and parsed like any other normal object

3

I've extended this answer: Is it not possible to stringify an Error using JSON.stringify?

serializeError.ts

export function serializeError(err: unknown) {
    return JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(err, Object.getOwnPropertyNames(err)))
}

And I can use it like this:

import { serializeError } from '../helpers/serializeError'; // Change to your path

try {
    const res = await create(data);
    return { status: 201 };
} catch (err) {
    return { status: 400, error: serializeError(err) };
}
1

Usually I declare once:

  const cloneError = (err) => {
    return err ? { name: err.name, message: err.message, stack: err.stack, cause: err.cause } : {};
  };

Then everywhere I can use it, for instance:

...logger.log('An error occurred:', cloneError(err));
0

You can solve this with a one-liner( errStringified ) in plain javascript:

var error = new Error('simple error message');
var errStringified = (err => JSON.stringify(Object.getOwnPropertyNames(Object.getPrototypeOf(err)).reduce(function(accumulator, currentValue) { return accumulator[currentValue] = err[currentValue], accumulator}, {})))(error);
console.log(errStringified);

It works with DOMExceptions as well.

2
  • 3
    That's a long one-liner! Sep 30, 2020 at 5:43
  • 1
    Oh yes, it's just beautiful. Brings tears to my eyes, I'm so proud.
    – savram
    Sep 30, 2020 at 13:04

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.