Is there a way to print all methods of an object in JavaScript?
6 Answers
Sure:
function getMethods(obj) {
var result = [];
for (var id in obj) {
try {
if (typeof(obj[id]) == "function") {
result.push(id + ": " + obj[id].toString());
}
} catch (err) {
result.push(id + ": inaccessible");
}
}
return result;
}
Using it:
alert(getMethods(document).join("\n"));
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2the try/catch is a good approach. There are some property/methods in IE that will error out on access. Sep 30, 2008 at 12:26
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3Note that it doesn't work on some built-in objects like Date:
var a = new Date(); console.log(typeof a, getMethods(a));
Returns:object []
.– FGMMay 24, 2016 at 15:02
If you just want to look what is inside an object, you can print all object's keys. Some of them can be variables, some - methods.
The method is not very accurate, however it's really quick:
console.log(Object.keys(obj));
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7
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@old-geezer This returns all date methods,
Object.getOwnPropertyNames(Date.prototype).join("\n")
– vikkeeMar 28 at 20:36
Here is an ES6
sample.
// Get the Object's methods names:
function getMethodsNames(obj = this) {
return Object.keys(obj)
.filter((key) => typeof obj[key] === 'function');
}
// Get the Object's methods (functions):
function getMethods(obj = this) {
return Object.keys(obj)
.filter((key) => typeof obj[key] === 'function')
.map((key) => obj[key]);
}
obj = this
is an ES6 default parameter, you can pass in an Object or it will default to this
.
Object.keys
returns an Array of the Object
's own enumerable properties.
Over the window
Object it will return [..., 'localStorage', ...'location']
.
(param) => ...
is an ES6 arrow function, it's a shorthand for
function(param) {
return ...
}
with an implicit return.
Array.filter
creates a new array with all elements that pass the test (typeof obj[key] === 'function'
).
Array.map
creates a new array with the results of calling a provided function on every element in this array (return obj[key]
).
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2This is useful! One correction: inside the functions
obj
should be used instead ofthis
. Jun 26, 2017 at 21:31
Take a gander at this code:-
function writeLn(s)
{
//your code to write a line to stdout
WScript.Echo(s)
}
function Base() {}
Base.prototype.methodA = function() {}
Base.prototype.attribA = "hello"
var derived = new Base()
derived.methodB = function() {}
derived.attribB = "world";
function getMethods(obj)
{
var retVal = {}
for (var candidate in obj)
{
if (typeof(obj[candidate]) == "function")
retVal[candidate] = {func: obj[candidate], inherited: !obj.hasOwnProperty(candidate)}
}
return retVal
}
var result = getMethods(derived)
for (var name in result)
{
writeLn(name + " is " + (result[name].inherited ? "" : "not") + " inherited")
}
The getMethod function returns the set of methods along with whether the method is one that has been inherited from a prototype.
Note that if you intend to use this on objects that are supplied from the context such as browser/DOM object then it won't work IE.
From here:
Example 1: This example writes out all the properties of the "navigator" object, plus their values:
for (var myprop in navigator){
document.write(myprop+": "+navigator[myprop]+"<br>")
}
Just replace 'navigator' with whatever object you are interested in and you should be good to go.
As mentioned by Anthony in the comments section - This returns all attributes not just methods as the question asked for.
Oops! That'll teach me to try and answer a question in a language I don't know. Still, I think the code is useful - just not what was required.
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This returns all attributes not just methods as the question asked for. On IE it only returns some of the properties and none of the methods. Sep 30, 2008 at 10:50
Since methods in JavaScript are just properties that are functions, the for..in loop will enumerate them with an exception - it won't enumerate built-in methods. As far as I know, there is no way to enumerate built-in methods. And you can't declare your own methods or properties on an object that aren't enumerable this way.