92

When writing a iPhone / iPad app with a UIWebView, the console isn't visible. this excellent answer shows how to trap errors, but I would like to use the console.log() as well.

2
  • 1
    Write it in the browser first, turn on Developer Tools, then look at the console output.
    – beatgammit
    Jun 28, 2011 at 15:00
  • 1
    There's a lot of options presented in this similar question: Debug iPad Safari with a PC - these don't require any native code to use.
    – Simon East
    Dec 23, 2022 at 14:07

7 Answers 7

200

After consulting with an esteemed colleague today he alerted me to the Safari Developer Toolkit, and how this can be connected to UIWebViews in the iOS Simulator for console output (and debugging!).

Steps:

  1. Open Safari Preferences -> "Advanced" tab -> enable checkbox "Show Develop menu in menu bar"
  2. Start app with UIWebView in iOS Simulator
  3. Safari -> Develop -> i(Pad/Pod) Simulator -> [the name of your UIWebView file]

You can now drop complex (in my case, flot) Javascript and other stuff into UIWebViews and debug at will.

EDIT: As pointed out by @Joshua J McKinnon this strategy also works when debugging UIWebViews on a device. Simply enable Web Inspector on your device settings: Settings->Safari->Advanced->Web Inspector (cheers @Jeremy Wiebe)

UPDATE: WKWebView is supported too

14
  • 13
    Note, this strategy also works when debugging on real iOS devices. Nov 27, 2013 at 3:00
  • 3
    +100 if I could. This is wonderful, it works for phone gap apps too! Feb 8, 2014 at 18:00
  • 2
    Trying with an iPad, when I go to the develop menu on Safari, there are no Devices to choose. When I deploy on the simulator, it works like a charm.
    – Floydian
    Mar 27, 2014 at 20:51
  • 11
    @Floydian you have to enable Web Inspector on the device. Settings->Safari->Advanced->Web Inspector. Jun 12, 2014 at 22:34
  • 2
    my app is not showing up in my develop menu. I have enabled web inspector. Safari shows up, but my app (which is current;y displaying 2 UIWebviews) is not detected.. any ideas?
    – narco
    Dec 17, 2015 at 23:01
82

I have a solution to log, using javascript, to the apps debug console. It's a bit crude, but it works.

First, we define the console.log() function in javascript, which opens and immediately removes an iframe with a ios-log: url.

// Debug
console = new Object();
console.log = function(log) {
  var iframe = document.createElement("IFRAME");
  iframe.setAttribute("src", "ios-log:#iOS#" + log);
  document.documentElement.appendChild(iframe);
  iframe.parentNode.removeChild(iframe);
  iframe = null;    
};
console.debug = console.log;
console.info = console.log;
console.warn = console.log;
console.error = console.log;

Now we have to catch this URL in the UIWebViewDelegate in the iOS app using the shouldStartLoadWithRequest function.

- (BOOL)webView:(UIWebView *)webView2 
shouldStartLoadWithRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request 
 navigationType:(UIWebViewNavigationType)navigationType {

    NSString *requestString = [[[request URL] absoluteString] stringByReplacingPercentEscapesUsingEncoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding];
    //NSLog(requestString);

    if ([requestString hasPrefix:@"ios-log:"]) {
        NSString* logString = [[requestString componentsSeparatedByString:@":#iOS#"] objectAtIndex:1];
                               NSLog(@"UIWebView console: %@", logString);
        return NO;
    }

    return YES;
}
2
  • 1
    see the simple idea of NSTJ below.
    – Ashwin S
    Jun 24, 2014 at 14:20
  • in swift 4 maybe? :D May 8, 2018 at 9:29
37

Here's the Swift solution: (It's a bit of a hack to get the context)

  1. You create the UIWebView.

  2. Get the internal context and override the console.log() javascript function.

    self.webView = UIWebView()
    self.webView.delegate = self
    
    let context = self.webView.valueForKeyPath("documentView.webView.mainFrame.javaScriptContext") as! JSContext
    
    let logFunction : @convention(block) (String) -> Void =
    {
        (msg: String) in
    
        NSLog("Console: %@", msg)
    }
    context.objectForKeyedSubscript("console").setObject(unsafeBitCast(logFunction, AnyObject.self), 
                                                         forKeyedSubscript: "log")
    
2
  • 3
    +100! saved me TONS of time, great hack, requires 0 changes in JS code. Thanks!! Just my 2 cents for future readers: don't forget to link JavaScriptCore framework to your project and import it in your webview swift file.
    – mindbomb
    Dec 2, 2015 at 2:39
  • Works for me with Swift 4... you haveto cast "log" to NSString..context.objectForKeyedSubscript("console").setObject(unsafeBitCast(logFunction, to: AnyObject.self), forKeyedSubscript: "log" as NSString)
    – Serge
    Jan 16, 2019 at 3:47
28

Starting from iOS7, you can use native Javascript bridge. Something as simple as following

 #import <JavaScriptCore/JavaScriptCore.h>

JSContext *ctx = [webview valueForKeyPath:@"documentView.webView.mainFrame.javaScriptContext"];
ctx[@"console"][@"log"] = ^(JSValue * msg) {
NSLog(@"JavaScript %@ log message: %@", [JSContext currentContext], msg);
    };
5
  • Out of interest, where is the ideal place to put this code? Nov 17, 2015 at 6:27
  • OK, figured it out. Just after you created the UIWebview you can setup any JSContext stuff. Nov 17, 2015 at 8:02
  • 4
    Does JSContext still work in iOS 8+ with WKWebView? Jan 12, 2016 at 18:06
  • I put it into - (BOOL)webView:(UIWebView *)webView shouldStartLoadWithRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request navigationType:(UIWebViewNavigationType)navigationType and it works perfectly! May 25, 2016 at 10:36
  • @NikolaiSamteladze: I tried with WKWebView and iOS 11.4.1 and he can't find documentView and crashes. I saw this answer and it seems that, it isn't possible this way.
    – testing
    Mar 1, 2019 at 11:04
9

NativeBridge is very helpful for communicating from a UIWebView to Objective-C. You can use it to pass console logs and call Objective-C functions.

https://github.com/ochameau/NativeBridge

console = new Object();
console.log = function(log) {
    NativeBridge.call("logToConsole", [log]);
};
console.debug = console.log;
console.info = console.log;
console.warn = console.log;
console.error = console.log;

window.onerror = function(error, url, line) {
    console.log('ERROR: '+error+' URL:'+url+' L:'+line);
};

The advantage of this technique is that things like newlines in log messages are preserved.

2
  • +1. Note to Apache Cordova users - Cordova already handles console.log, but the window.onerror function in this answer is very useful!
    – mpontillo
    Jul 2, 2013 at 17:39
  • For Appcelerator/Titanium developers: this too works to debug your Ti.UI.WebView
    – Byters
    Mar 22, 2018 at 20:27
1

Swift 5

func webView(_ webView: WKWebView, didFinish navigation: WKNavigation!) {
      webView.evaluateJavaScript("your javascript string") { (value, error) in
          if let errorMessage = (error! as NSError).userInfo["WKJavaScriptExceptionMessage"] as? String {
                print(errorMessage)
          }
      }
 }
1
0

Tried Leslie Godwin's fix but was getting this error:

'objectForKeyedSubscript' is unavailable: use subscripting

For Swift 2.2, here's what worked for me:

You will need to import JavaScriptCore for this code to compile:

import JavaScriptCore

if let context = webView.valueForKeyPath("documentView.webView.mainFrame.javaScriptContext") {
    context.evaluateScript("var console = { log: function(message) { _consoleLog(message) } }")
    let consoleLog: @convention(block) String -> Void = { message in
        print("javascript_log: " + message)
    }
    context.setObject(unsafeBitCast(consoleLog, AnyObject.self), forKeyedSubscript: "_consoleLog")
}

Then in your javascript code, calling console.log("_your_log_") will print in Xcode console.

Better yet, add this code as an extension to UIWebView:

import JavaScriptCore

extension UIWebView {
    public func hijackConsoleLog() {
        if let context = valueForKeyPath("documentView.webView.mainFrame.javaScriptContext") {
            context.evaluateScript("var console = { log: function(message) { _consoleLog(message) } }")
            let consoleLog: @convention(block) String -> Void = { message in
                print("javascript_log: " + message)
            }
            context.setObject(unsafeBitCast(consoleLog, AnyObject.self), forKeyedSubscript: "_consoleLog")
        }
    }
}

And then call this method during your UIWebView initialization step:

let webView = UIWebView(frame: CGRectZero)
webView.hijackConsoleLog()

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