175

I am checking the URL to see if it contains or includes a ? in it to control the hash pop state in the window. All other browsers aren’t having an issue, only IE.

The debugger gives me this error when I try to load in this way:

Object doesn't support property or method 'includes'

I get no error when I load the page in through the popstate.

    $(document).ready(function(e) {
        if(window.location.hash) {
            var hash;
            if(window.location.hash.includes("?")) {
                alert('I have a ?');
                hash = window.location.hash.substring(window.location.hash.indexOf('#') + 0,window.location.hash.indexOf('?'));
            }else {
                hash = window.location.hash;
            };
            if (hash=="#DRS" || hash=="#DRP" || hash=="#DFFI" || hash=="#DCI" || hash=="#DCP" || hash=="#DRP" || hash=="#DRMA" || hash=="#EICS" || hash=="#ORG"){
                $(hash+'Content').addClass('pageOn').removeClass('pageOff');
            }else {
                $('#homeContent').addClass('pageOn').removeClass('pageOff');
            };
        } else {
            $('#homeContent').addClass('pageOn').removeClass('pageOff');
        }
        $(window).on('popstate', function() {
            var hash;
            if(window.location.hash.includes("?")) {
                hash = window.location.hash.substring(window.location.hash.indexOf('#') + 0,window.location.hash.indexOf('?'));
            }else {
                hash = window.location.hash;
            };
            if (hash=="#DRS" || hash=="#DRP" || hash=="#DFFI" || hash=="#DCI" || hash=="#DCP" || hash=="#DRP" || hash=="#DRMA" || hash=="#EICS" || hash=="#ORG"){
                $(this).navigate({target: $(hash+'Content')});
                if(window.location.hash.includes("?")) {
                }else{
                    location.href = location.href+'?';
                }
            }else {
                $(this).navigate({target: $('#homeContent')});
            };
        });
});
1
  • What is the value of window.location.hash in internet explorer 11?
    – nils
    Jun 29, 2015 at 15:20

8 Answers 8

243

According to the MDN reference page, includes is not supported on Internet Explorer. The simplest alternative is to use indexOf, like this:

if(window.location.hash.indexOf("?") >= 0) {
    ...
}
5
  • 1
    OK well now i cannot get this to work if(window.location.hash.indexOf("?") >= 0) { //do nothing }else{ location.href = location.href+'?'; } Jun 29, 2015 at 15:43
  • I need to add a ? to the end of the url if the url doesn't have one already Jun 29, 2015 at 15:43
  • 1
    I know this is an old question and answer, but String.prototype.includes seems to be working for me on Windows 10 IE 11.
    – troxwalt
    Jun 20, 2018 at 20:05
  • 2
    @troxwalt That's good to hear, but it still doesn't work on Windows 7 IE11! Aug 2, 2018 at 13:31
  • If you are Reacting, you can use polyfill packages and avoid manually adding polyfills...
    – CPHPython
    Apr 5, 2019 at 10:09
57

IE11 does implement String.prototype.includes so why not using the official Polyfill?

  if (!String.prototype.includes) {
    String.prototype.includes = function(search, start) {
      if (typeof start !== 'number') {
        start = 0;
      }

      if (start + search.length > this.length) {
        return false;
      } else {
        return this.indexOf(search, start) !== -1;
      }
    };
  }

Source: polyfill source

2
37

Adding import 'core-js/es7/array'; to my polyfill.ts fixed the issue for me.

2
  • This was posted long ago but maybe this may help someone on the newer frameworks somehow however I think the selected answer should suffice for anything outside of special use cases. Oct 3, 2018 at 16:44
  • 1
    import 'core-js/es/array'; as of 2020
    – timhc22
    Mar 5, 2020 at 12:01
15

I had a similar issue with an Angular project. In my polyfills.ts I had to add both:

    import "core-js/es7/array";
    import "core-js/es7/object";

In addition to enabling all the other IE 11 defaults. (See comments in polyfills.ts if using angular)

After adding these imports the error went away and my Object data populated as intended.

2
  • This working for me. What does those two imports do anyway?. And what import fixed the includes error?. Or both of em are for the includes error?
    – iamjoshua
    May 29, 2019 at 4:03
  • Since IE11 is no longer receiving feature updates by Microsoft, the javascript implementation is dated and only has support for methods thru ES5. By importing these 2 files, you are adding the polyfill scripts for Array and Object thru ES7 which includes the 'includes' method.
    – bsheps
    Jun 10, 2019 at 2:34
6

As in Internet Explorer, the javascript method "includes" doesn't support which is leading to the error as below

dijit.form.FilteringSelect TypeError: Object doesn't support property or method 'includes'

So I have changed the JavaScript string method from "includes" to "indexOf" as below

//str1 doesn't match str2 w.r.t index, so it will try to add object
var str1="acd", str2="b";
if(str1.indexOf(str2) == -1) 
{
  alert("add object");
}
else 
{
 alert("object not added");
}
3

I've used includes from Lodash which is really similar to the native.

1

I'm using ReactJs and used import 'core-js/es6/string'; at the start of index.js to solve my problem.

I'm also using import 'react-app-polyfill/ie11'; to support running React in IE11.

react-app-polyfill

This package includes polyfills for various browsers. It includes minimum requirements and commonly used language features used by Create React App projects.

https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/blob/master/packages/react-app-polyfill/README.md

2
  • 1
    I started manually polyfilling all functions that fail in IE11 console... Really appreciate your time saver answer. To add those 2 packages at once to your package.json: npm i --save core-js react-app-polyfill
    – CPHPython
    Apr 5, 2019 at 10:02
  • Btw, core-js/es6 seems to not exist anymore in v3, so just import 'core-js'; as suggested in Github.
    – CPHPython
    Apr 5, 2019 at 10:14
0

This question and its answers led me to my own solution (with help from SO), though some say you shouldn't tamper with native prototypes:

  // IE does not support .includes() so I'm making my own:
  String.prototype.doesInclude=function(needle){
    return this.substring(needle) != -1;
  }

Then I just replaced all .includes() with .doesInclude() and my problem was solved.

1
  • 2
    .includes () works on both strings and arrays. Your substring() solution works only with strings and fails with arrays. As answered by other people, using indexOf() instead of substring() is better because this works in both cases. Nov 13, 2017 at 12:08

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