Node.js v24.0.0-v8-canary202410309e816629fb documentation
- Node.js v24.0.0-v8-canary202410309e816629fb
-
Table of contents
- Util
util.callbackify(original)
util.debuglog(section[, callback])
util.debug(section)
util.deprecate(fn, msg[, code])
util.format(format[, ...args])
util.formatWithOptions(inspectOptions, format[, ...args])
util.getCallSite(frames)
util.getSystemErrorName(err)
util.getSystemErrorMap()
util.getSystemErrorMessage(err)
util.inherits(constructor, superConstructor)
util.inspect(object[, options])
util.inspect(object[, showHidden[, depth[, colors]]])
util.isDeepStrictEqual(val1, val2)
- Class:
util.MIMEType
- Class:
util.MIMEParams
util.parseArgs([config])
util.parseEnv(content)
util.promisify(original)
util.stripVTControlCharacters(str)
util.styleText(format, text[, options])
- Class:
util.TextDecoder
- Class:
util.TextEncoder
util.toUSVString(string)
util.transferableAbortController()
util.transferableAbortSignal(signal)
util.aborted(signal, resource)
util.types
util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer(value)
util.types.isArrayBufferView(value)
util.types.isArgumentsObject(value)
util.types.isArrayBuffer(value)
util.types.isAsyncFunction(value)
util.types.isBigInt64Array(value)
util.types.isBigIntObject(value)
util.types.isBigUint64Array(value)
util.types.isBooleanObject(value)
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(value)
util.types.isCryptoKey(value)
util.types.isDataView(value)
util.types.isDate(value)
util.types.isExternal(value)
util.types.isFloat32Array(value)
util.types.isFloat64Array(value)
util.types.isGeneratorFunction(value)
util.types.isGeneratorObject(value)
util.types.isInt8Array(value)
util.types.isInt16Array(value)
util.types.isInt32Array(value)
util.types.isKeyObject(value)
util.types.isMap(value)
util.types.isMapIterator(value)
util.types.isModuleNamespaceObject(value)
util.types.isNativeError(value)
util.types.isNumberObject(value)
util.types.isPromise(value)
util.types.isProxy(value)
util.types.isRegExp(value)
util.types.isSet(value)
util.types.isSetIterator(value)
util.types.isSharedArrayBuffer(value)
util.types.isStringObject(value)
util.types.isSymbolObject(value)
util.types.isTypedArray(value)
util.types.isUint8Array(value)
util.types.isUint8ClampedArray(value)
util.types.isUint16Array(value)
util.types.isUint32Array(value)
util.types.isWeakMap(value)
util.types.isWeakSet(value)
- Deprecated APIs
- Util
-
Index
- Assertion testing
- Asynchronous context tracking
- Async hooks
- Buffer
- C++ addons
- C/C++ addons with Node-API
- C++ embedder API
- Child processes
- Cluster
- Command-line options
- Console
- Corepack
- Crypto
- Debugger
- Deprecated APIs
- Diagnostics Channel
- DNS
- Domain
- Errors
- Events
- File system
- Globals
- HTTP
- HTTP/2
- HTTPS
- Inspector
- Internationalization
- Modules: CommonJS modules
- Modules: ECMAScript modules
- Modules:
node:module
API - Modules: Packages
- Modules: TypeScript
- Net
- OS
- Path
- Performance hooks
- Permissions
- Process
- Punycode
- Query strings
- Readline
- REPL
- Report
- Single executable applications
- SQLite
- Stream
- String decoder
- Test runner
- Timers
- TLS/SSL
- Trace events
- TTY
- UDP/datagram
- URL
- Utilities
- V8
- VM
- WASI
- Web Crypto API
- Web Streams API
- Worker threads
- Zlib
- Other versions
- Options
Util#
Source Code: lib/util.js
The node:util
module supports the needs of Node.js internal APIs. Many of the
utilities are useful for application and module developers as well. To access
it:
const util = require('node:util');
util.callbackify(original)
#
original
<Function> Anasync
function- Returns: <Function> a callback style function
Takes an async
function (or a function that returns a Promise
) and returns a
function following the error-first callback style, i.e. taking
an (err, value) => ...
callback as the last argument. In the callback, the
first argument will be the rejection reason (or null
if the Promise
resolved), and the second argument will be the resolved value.
const util = require('node:util');
async function fn() {
return 'hello world';
}
const callbackFunction = util.callbackify(fn);
callbackFunction((err, ret) => {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(ret);
});
Will print:
hello world
The callback is executed asynchronously, and will have a limited stack trace.
If the callback throws, the process will emit an 'uncaughtException'
event, and if not handled will exit.
Since null
has a special meaning as the first argument to a callback, if a
wrapped function rejects a Promise
with a falsy value as a reason, the value
is wrapped in an Error
with the original value stored in a field named
reason
.
function fn() {
return Promise.reject(null);
}
const callbackFunction = util.callbackify(fn);
callbackFunction((err, ret) => {
// When the Promise was rejected with `null` it is wrapped with an Error and
// the original value is stored in `reason`.
err && Object.hasOwn(err, 'reason') && err.reason === null; // true
});
util.debuglog(section[, callback])
#
section
<string> A string identifying the portion of the application for which thedebuglog
function is being created.callback
<Function> A callback invoked the first time the logging function is called with a function argument that is a more optimized logging function.- Returns: <Function> The logging function
The util.debuglog()
method is used to create a function that conditionally
writes debug messages to stderr
based on the existence of the NODE_DEBUG
environment variable. If the section
name appears within the value of that
environment variable, then the returned function operates similar to
console.error()
. If not, then the returned function is a no-op.
const util = require('node:util');
const debuglog = util.debuglog('foo');
debuglog('hello from foo [%d]', 123);
If this program is run with NODE_DEBUG=foo
in the environment, then
it will output something like:
FOO 3245: hello from foo [123]
where 3245
is the process id. If it is not run with that
environment variable set, then it will not print anything.
The section
supports wildcard also:
const util = require('node:util');
const debuglog = util.debuglog('foo-bar');
debuglog('hi there, it\'s foo-bar [%d]', 2333);
if it is run with NODE_DEBUG=foo*
in the environment, then it will output
something like:
FOO-BAR 3257: hi there, it's foo-bar [2333]
Multiple comma-separated section
names may be specified in the NODE_DEBUG
environment variable: NODE_DEBUG=fs,net,tls
.
The optional callback
argument can be used to replace the logging function
with a different function that doesn't have any initialization or
unnecessary wrapping.
const util = require('node:util');
let debuglog = util.debuglog('internals', (debug) => {
// Replace with a logging function that optimizes out
// testing if the section is enabled
debuglog = debug;
});
debuglog().enabled
#
The util.debuglog().enabled
getter is used to create a test that can be used
in conditionals based on the existence of the NODE_DEBUG
environment variable.
If the section
name appears within the value of that environment variable,
then the returned value will be true
. If not, then the returned value will be
false
.
const util = require('node:util');
const enabled = util.debuglog('foo').enabled;
if (enabled) {
console.log('hello from foo [%d]', 123);
}
If this program is run with NODE_DEBUG=foo
in the environment, then it will
output something like:
hello from foo [123]
util.debug(section)
#
Alias for util.debuglog
. Usage allows for readability of that doesn't imply
logging when only using util.debuglog().enabled
.
util.deprecate(fn, msg[, code])
#
fn
<Function> The function that is being deprecated.msg
<string> A warning message to display when the deprecated function is invoked.code
<string> A deprecation code. See the list of deprecated APIs for a list of codes.- Returns: <Function> The deprecated function wrapped to emit a warning.
The util.deprecate()
method wraps fn
(which may be a function or class) in
such a way that it is marked as deprecated.
const util = require('node:util');
exports.obsoleteFunction = util.deprecate(() => {
// Do something here.
}, 'obsoleteFunction() is deprecated. Use newShinyFunction() instead.');
When called, util.deprecate()
will return a function that will emit a
DeprecationWarning
using the 'warning'
event. The warning will
be emitted and printed to stderr
the first time the returned function is
called. After the warning is emitted, the wrapped function is called without
emitting a warning.
If the same optional code
is supplied in multiple calls to util.deprecate()
,
the warning will be emitted only once for that code
.
const util = require('node:util');
const fn1 = util.deprecate(someFunction, someMessage, 'DEP0001');
const fn2 = util.deprecate(someOtherFunction, someOtherMessage, 'DEP0001');
fn1(); // Emits a deprecation warning with code DEP0001
fn2(); // Does not emit a deprecation warning because it has the same code
If either the --no-deprecation
or --no-warnings
command-line flags are
used, or if the process.noDeprecation
property is set to true
prior to
the first deprecation warning, the util.deprecate()
method does nothing.
If the --trace-deprecation
or --trace-warnings
command-line flags are set,
or the process.traceDeprecation
property is set to true
, a warning and a
stack trace are printed to stderr
the first time the deprecated function is
called.
If the --throw-deprecation
command-line flag is set, or the
process.throwDeprecation
property is set to true
, then an exception will be
thrown when the deprecated function is called.
The --throw-deprecation
command-line flag and process.throwDeprecation
property take precedence over --trace-deprecation
and
process.traceDeprecation
.
util.format(format[, ...args])
#
format
<string> Aprintf
-like format string.
The util.format()
method returns a formatted string using the first argument
as a printf
-like format string which can contain zero or more format
specifiers. Each specifier is replaced with the converted value from the
corresponding argument. Supported specifiers are:
%s
:String
will be used to convert all values exceptBigInt
,Object
and-0
.BigInt
values will be represented with ann
and Objects that have no user definedtoString
function are inspected usingutil.inspect()
with options{ depth: 0, colors: false, compact: 3 }
.%d
:Number
will be used to convert all values exceptBigInt
andSymbol
.%i
:parseInt(value, 10)
is used for all values exceptBigInt
andSymbol
.%f
:parseFloat(value)
is used for all values expectSymbol
.%j
: JSON. Replaced with the string'[Circular]'
if the argument contains circular references.%o
:Object
. A string representation of an object with generic JavaScript object formatting. Similar toutil.inspect()
with options{ showHidden: true, showProxy: true }
. This will show the full object including non-enumerable properties and proxies.%O
:Object
. A string representation of an object with generic JavaScript object formatting. Similar toutil.inspect()
without options. This will show the full object not including non-enumerable properties and proxies.%c
:CSS
. This specifier is ignored and will skip any CSS passed in.%%
: single percent sign ('%'
). This does not consume an argument.- Returns: <string> The formatted string
If a specifier does not have a corresponding argument, it is not replaced:
util.format('%s:%s', 'foo');
// Returns: 'foo:%s'
Values that are not part of the format string are formatted using
util.inspect()
if their type is not string
.
If there are more arguments passed to the util.format()
method than the
number of specifiers, the extra arguments are concatenated to the returned
string, separated by spaces:
util.format('%s:%s', 'foo', 'bar', 'baz');
// Returns: 'foo:bar baz'
If the first argument does not contain a valid format specifier, util.format()
returns a string that is the concatenation of all arguments separated by spaces:
util.format(1, 2, 3);
// Returns: '1 2 3'
If only one argument is passed to util.format()
, it is returned as it is
without any formatting:
util.format('%% %s');
// Returns: '%% %s'
util.format()
is a synchronous method that is intended as a debugging tool.
Some input values can have a significant performance overhead that can block the
event loop. Use this function with care and never in a hot code path.
util.formatWithOptions(inspectOptions, format[, ...args])
#
This function is identical to util.format()
, except in that it takes
an inspectOptions
argument which specifies options that are passed along to
util.inspect()
.
util.formatWithOptions({ colors: true }, 'See object %O', { foo: 42 });
// Returns 'See object { foo: 42 }', where `42` is colored as a number
// when printed to a terminal.
util.getCallSite(frames)
#
frames
<number> Number of frames returned in the stacktrace. Default:10
. Allowable range is between 1 and 200.- Returns: <Object[]> An array of stacktrace objects
functionName
<string> Returns the name of the function associated with this stack frame.scriptName
<string> Returns the name of the resource that contains the script for the function for this StackFrame.lineNumber
<number> Returns the number, 1-based, of the line for the associate function call.column
<number> Returns the 1-based column offset on the line for the associated function call.
Returns an array of stacktrace objects containing the stack of the caller function.
const util = require('node:util');
function exampleFunction() {
const callSites = util.getCallSite();
console.log('Call Sites:');
callSites.forEach((callSite, index) => {
console.log(`CallSite ${index + 1}:`);
console.log(`Function Name: ${callSite.functionName}`);
console.log(`Script Name: ${callSite.scriptName}`);
console.log(`Line Number: ${callSite.lineNumber}`);
console.log(`Column Number: ${callSite.column}`);
});
// CallSite 1:
// Function Name: exampleFunction
// Script Name: /home/example.js
// Line Number: 5
// Column Number: 26
// CallSite 2:
// Function Name: anotherFunction
// Script Name: /home/example.js
// Line Number: 22
// Column Number: 3
// ...
}
// A function to simulate another stack layer
function anotherFunction() {
exampleFunction();
}
anotherFunction();
util.getSystemErrorName(err)
#
Returns the string name for a numeric error code that comes from a Node.js API. The mapping between error codes and error names is platform-dependent. See Common System Errors for the names of common errors.
fs.access('file/that/does/not/exist', (err) => {
const name = util.getSystemErrorName(err.errno);
console.error(name); // ENOENT
});
util.getSystemErrorMap()
#
- Returns: <Map>
Returns a Map of all system error codes available from the Node.js API. The mapping between error codes and error names is platform-dependent. See Common System Errors for the names of common errors.
fs.access('file/that/does/not/exist', (err) => {
const errorMap = util.getSystemErrorMap();
const name = errorMap.get(err.errno);
console.error(name); // ENOENT
});
util.getSystemErrorMessage(err)
#
Returns the string message for a numeric error code that comes from a Node.js API. The mapping between error codes and string messages is platform-dependent.
fs.access('file/that/does/not/exist', (err) => {
const name = util.getSystemErrorMessage(err.errno);
console.error(name); // no such file or directory
});
util.inherits(constructor, superConstructor)
#
extends
keyword instead.constructor
<Function>superConstructor
<Function>
Usage of util.inherits()
is discouraged. Please use the ES6 class
and
extends
keywords to get language level inheritance support. Also note
that the two styles are semantically incompatible.
Inherit the prototype methods from one constructor into another. The
prototype of constructor
will be set to a new object created from
superConstructor
.
This mainly adds some input validation on top of
Object.setPrototypeOf(constructor.prototype, superConstructor.prototype)
.
As an additional convenience, superConstructor
will be accessible
through the constructor.super_
property.
const util = require('node:util');
const EventEmitter = require('node:events');
function MyStream() {
EventEmitter.call(this);
}
util.inherits(MyStream, EventEmitter);
MyStream.prototype.write = function(data) {
this.emit('data', data);
};
const stream = new MyStream();
console.log(stream instanceof EventEmitter); // true
console.log(MyStream.super_ === EventEmitter); // true
stream.on('data', (data) => {
console.log(`Received data: "${data}"`);
});
stream.write('It works!'); // Received data: "It works!"
ES6 example using class
and extends
:
const EventEmitter = require('node:events');
class MyStream extends EventEmitter {
write(data) {
this.emit('data', data);
}
}
const stream = new MyStream();
stream.on('data', (data) => {
console.log(`Received data: "${data}"`);
});
stream.write('With ES6');
util.inspect(object[, options])
#
util.inspect(object[, showHidden[, depth[, colors]]])
object
<any> Any JavaScript primitive orObject
.options
<Object>showHidden
<boolean> Iftrue
,object
's non-enumerable symbols and properties are included in the formatted result.WeakMap
andWeakSet
entries are also included as well as user defined prototype properties (excluding method properties). Default:false
.depth
<number> Specifies the number of times to recurse while formattingobject
. This is useful for inspecting large objects. To recurse up to the maximum call stack size passInfinity
ornull
. Default:2
.colors
<boolean> Iftrue
, the output is styled with ANSI color codes. Colors are customizable. See Customizingutil.inspect
colors. Default:false
.customInspect
<boolean> Iffalse
,[util.inspect.custom](depth, opts, inspect)
functions are not invoked. Default:true
.showProxy
<boolean> Iftrue
,Proxy
inspection includes thetarget
andhandler
objects. Default:false
.maxArrayLength
<integer> Specifies the maximum number ofArray
,TypedArray
,Map
,Set
,WeakMap
, andWeakSet
elements to include when formatting. Set tonull
orInfinity
to show all elements. Set to0
or negative to show no elements. Default:100
.maxStringLength
<integer> Specifies the maximum number of characters to include when formatting. Set tonull
orInfinity
to show all elements. Set to0
or negative to show no characters. Default:10000
.breakLength
<integer> The length at which input values are split across multiple lines. Set toInfinity
to format the input as a single line (in combination withcompact
set totrue
or any number >=1
). Default:80
.compact
<boolean> | <integer> Setting this tofalse
causes each object key to be displayed on a new line. It will break on new lines in text that is longer thanbreakLength
. If set to a number, the mostn
inner elements are united on a single line as long as all properties fit intobreakLength
. Short array elements are also grouped together. For more information, see the example below. Default:3
.sorted
<boolean> | <Function> If set totrue
or a function, all properties of an object, andSet
andMap
entries are sorted in the resulting string. If set totrue
the default sort is used. If set to a function, it is used as a compare function.getters
<boolean> | <string> If set totrue
, getters are inspected. If set to'get'
, only getters without a corresponding setter are inspected. If set to'set'
, only getters with a corresponding setter are inspected. This might cause side effects depending on the getter function. Default:false
.numericSeparator
<boolean> If set totrue
, an underscore is used to separate every three digits in all bigints and numbers. Default:false
.
- Returns: <string> The representation of
object
.
The util.inspect()
method returns a string representation of object
that is
intended for debugging. The output of util.inspect
may change at any time
and should not be depended upon programmatically. Additional options
may be
passed that alter the result.
util.inspect()
will use the constructor's name and/or @@toStringTag
to make
an identifiable tag for an inspected value.
class Foo {
get [Symbol.toStringTag]() {
return 'bar';
}
}
class Bar {}
const baz = Object.create(null, { [Symbol.toStringTag]: { value: 'foo' } });
util.inspect(new Foo()); // 'Foo [bar] {}'
util.inspect(new Bar()); // 'Bar {}'
util.inspect(baz); // '[foo] {}'
Circular references point to their anchor by using a reference index:
const { inspect } = require('node:util');
const obj = {};
obj.a = [obj];
obj.b = {};
obj.b.inner = obj.b;
obj.b.obj = obj;
console.log(inspect(obj));
// <ref *1> {
// a: [ [Circular *1] ],
// b: <ref *2> { inner: [Circular *2], obj: [Circular *1] }
// }
The following example inspects all properties of the util
object:
const util = require('node:util');
console.log(util.inspect(util, { showHidden: true, depth: null }));
The following example highlights the effect of the compact
option:
const util = require('node:util');
const o = {
a: [1, 2, [[
'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,\nconsectetur adipiscing elit, sed do ' +
'eiusmod \ntempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.',
'test',
'foo']], 4],
b: new Map([['za', 1], ['zb', 'test']]),
};
console.log(util.inspect(o, { compact: true, depth: 5, breakLength: 80 }));
// { a:
// [ 1,
// 2,
// [ [ 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,\nconsectetur [...]', // A long line
// 'test',
// 'foo' ] ],
// 4 ],
// b: Map(2) { 'za' => 1, 'zb' => 'test' } }
// Setting `compact` to false or an integer creates more reader friendly output.
console.log(util.inspect(o, { compact: false, depth: 5, breakLength: 80 }));
// {
// a: [
// 1,
// 2,
// [
// [
// 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet,\n' +
// 'consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod \n' +
// 'tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.',
// 'test',
// 'foo'
// ]
// ],
// 4
// ],
// b: Map(2) {
// 'za' => 1,
// 'zb' => 'test'
// }
// }
// Setting `breakLength` to e.g. 150 will print the "Lorem ipsum" text in a
// single line.
The showHidden
option allows WeakMap
and WeakSet
entries to be
inspected. If there are more entries than maxArrayLength
, there is no
guarantee which entries are displayed. That means retrieving the same
WeakSet
entries twice may result in different output. Furthermore, entries
with no remaining strong references may be garbage collected at any time.
const { inspect } = require('node:util');
const obj = { a: 1 };
const obj2 = { b: 2 };
const weakSet = new WeakSet([obj, obj2]);
console.log(inspect(weakSet, { showHidden: true }));
// WeakSet { { a: 1 }, { b: 2 } }
The sorted
option ensures that an object's property insertion order does not
impact the result of util.inspect()
.
const { inspect } = require('node:util');
const assert = require('node:assert');
const o1 = {
b: [2, 3, 1],
a: '`a` comes before `b`',
c: new Set([2, 3, 1]),
};
console.log(inspect(o1, { sorted: true }));
// { a: '`a` comes before `b`', b: [ 2, 3, 1 ], c: Set(3) { 1, 2, 3 } }
console.log(inspect(o1, { sorted: (a, b) => b.localeCompare(a) }));
// { c: Set(3) { 3, 2, 1 }, b: [ 2, 3, 1 ], a: '`a` comes before `b`' }
const o2 = {
c: new Set([2, 1, 3]),
a: '`a` comes before `b`',
b: [2, 3, 1],
};
assert.strict.equal(
inspect(o1, { sorted: true }),
inspect(o2, { sorted: true }),
);
The numericSeparator
option adds an underscore every three digits to all
numbers.
const { inspect } = require('node:util');
const thousand = 1_000;
const million = 1_000_000;
const bigNumber = 123_456_789n;
const bigDecimal = 1_234.123_45;
console.log(inspect(thousand, { numericSeparator: true }));
// 1_000
console.log(inspect(million, { numericSeparator: true }));
// 1_000_000
console.log(inspect(bigNumber, { numericSeparator: true }));
// 123_456_789n
console.log(inspect(bigDecimal, { numericSeparator: true }));
// 1_234.123_45
util.inspect()
is a synchronous method intended for debugging. Its maximum
output length is approximately 128 MiB. Inputs that result in longer output will
be truncated.
Customizing util.inspect
colors#
Color output (if enabled) of util.inspect
is customizable globally
via the util.inspect.styles
and util.inspect.colors
properties.
util.inspect.styles
is a map associating a style name to a color from
util.inspect.colors
.
The default styles and associated colors are:
bigint
:yellow
boolean
:yellow
date
:magenta
module
:underline
name
: (no styling)null
:bold
number
:yellow
regexp
:red
special
:cyan
(e.g.,Proxies
)string
:green
symbol
:green
undefined
:grey
Color styling uses ANSI control codes that may not be supported on all
terminals. To verify color support use tty.hasColors()
.
Predefined control codes are listed below (grouped as "Modifiers", "Foreground colors", and "Background colors").
Modifiers#
Modifier support varies throughout different terminals. They will mostly be ignored, if not supported.
reset
- Resets all (color) modifiers to their defaults- bold - Make text bold
- italic - Make text italic
- underline - Make text underlined
strikethrough- Puts a horizontal line through the center of the text (Alias:strikeThrough
,crossedout
,crossedOut
)hidden
- Prints the text, but makes it invisible (Alias: conceal)- dim - Decreased color intensity (Alias:
faint
) - overlined - Make text overlined
- blink - Hides and shows the text in an interval
- inverse - Swap foreground and
background colors (Alias:
swapcolors
,swapColors
) - doubleunderline - Make text
double underlined (Alias:
doubleUnderline
) - framed - Draw a frame around the text
Foreground colors#
black
red
green
yellow
blue
magenta
cyan
white
gray
(alias:grey
,blackBright
)redBright
greenBright
yellowBright
blueBright
magentaBright
cyanBright
whiteBright
Background colors#
bgBlack
bgRed
bgGreen
bgYellow
bgBlue
bgMagenta
bgCyan
bgWhite
bgGray
(alias:bgGrey
,bgBlackBright
)bgRedBright
bgGreenBright
bgYellowBright
bgBlueBright
bgMagentaBright
bgCyanBright
bgWhiteBright
Custom inspection functions on objects#
Objects may also define their own
[util.inspect.custom](depth, opts, inspect)
function,
which util.inspect()
will invoke and use the result of when inspecting
the object.
const util = require('node:util');
class Box {
constructor(value) {
this.value = value;
}
[util.inspect.custom](depth, options, inspect) {
if (depth < 0) {
return options.stylize('[Box]', 'special');
}
const newOptions = Object.assign({}, options, {
depth: options.depth === null ? null : options.depth - 1,
});
// Five space padding because that's the size of "Box< ".
const padding = ' '.repeat(5);
const inner = inspect(this.value, newOptions)
.replace(/\n/g, `\n${padding}`);
return `${options.stylize('Box', 'special')}< ${inner} >`;
}
}
const box = new Box(true);
util.inspect(box);
// Returns: "Box< true >"
Custom [util.inspect.custom](depth, opts, inspect)
functions typically return
a string but may return a value of any type that will be formatted accordingly
by util.inspect()
.
const util = require('node:util');
const obj = { foo: 'this will not show up in the inspect() output' };
obj[util.inspect.custom] = (depth) => {
return { bar: 'baz' };
};
util.inspect(obj);
// Returns: "{ bar: 'baz' }"
util.inspect.custom
#
- <symbol> that can be used to declare custom inspect functions.
In addition to being accessible through util.inspect.custom
, this
symbol is registered globally and can be
accessed in any environment as Symbol.for('nodejs.util.inspect.custom')
.
Using this allows code to be written in a portable fashion, so that the custom
inspect function is used in an Node.js environment and ignored in the browser.
The util.inspect()
function itself is passed as third argument to the custom
inspect function to allow further portability.
const customInspectSymbol = Symbol.for('nodejs.util.inspect.custom');
class Password {
constructor(value) {
this.value = value;
}
toString() {
return 'xxxxxxxx';
}
[customInspectSymbol](depth, inspectOptions, inspect) {
return `Password <${this.toString()}>`;
}
}
const password = new Password('r0sebud');
console.log(password);
// Prints Password <xxxxxxxx>
See Custom inspection functions on Objects for more details.
util.inspect.defaultOptions
#
The defaultOptions
value allows customization of the default options used by
util.inspect
. This is useful for functions like console.log
or
util.format
which implicitly call into util.inspect
. It shall be set to an
object containing one or more valid util.inspect()
options. Setting
option properties directly is also supported.
const util = require('node:util');
const arr = Array(101).fill(0);
console.log(arr); // Logs the truncated array
util.inspect.defaultOptions.maxArrayLength = null;
console.log(arr); // logs the full array
util.isDeepStrictEqual(val1, val2)
#
Returns true
if there is deep strict equality between val1
and val2
.
Otherwise, returns false
.
See assert.deepStrictEqual()
for more information about deep strict
equality.
Class: util.MIMEType
#
An implementation of the MIMEType class.
In accordance with browser conventions, all properties of MIMEType
objects
are implemented as getters and setters on the class prototype, rather than as
data properties on the object itself.
A MIME string is a structured string containing multiple meaningful
components. When parsed, a MIMEType
object is returned containing
properties for each of these components.
Constructor: new MIMEType(input)
#
input
<string> The input MIME to parse
Creates a new MIMEType
object by parsing the input
.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/plain');
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/plain');
A TypeError
will be thrown if the input
is not a valid MIME. Note
that an effort will be made to coerce the given values into strings. For
instance:
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIME = new MIMEType({ toString: () => 'text/plain' });
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: text/plain
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIME = new MIMEType({ toString: () => 'text/plain' });
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: text/plain
mime.type
#
Gets and sets the type portion of the MIME.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/javascript');
console.log(myMIME.type);
// Prints: text
myMIME.type = 'application';
console.log(myMIME.type);
// Prints: application
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: application/javascript
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/javascript');
console.log(myMIME.type);
// Prints: text
myMIME.type = 'application';
console.log(myMIME.type);
// Prints: application
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: application/javascript
mime.subtype
#
Gets and sets the subtype portion of the MIME.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/ecmascript');
console.log(myMIME.subtype);
// Prints: ecmascript
myMIME.subtype = 'javascript';
console.log(myMIME.subtype);
// Prints: javascript
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: text/javascript
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/ecmascript');
console.log(myMIME.subtype);
// Prints: ecmascript
myMIME.subtype = 'javascript';
console.log(myMIME.subtype);
// Prints: javascript
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: text/javascript
mime.essence
#
Gets the essence of the MIME. This property is read only.
Use mime.type
or mime.subtype
to alter the MIME.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/javascript;key=value');
console.log(myMIME.essence);
// Prints: text/javascript
myMIME.type = 'application';
console.log(myMIME.essence);
// Prints: application/javascript
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: application/javascript;key=value
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIME = new MIMEType('text/javascript;key=value');
console.log(myMIME.essence);
// Prints: text/javascript
myMIME.type = 'application';
console.log(myMIME.essence);
// Prints: application/javascript
console.log(String(myMIME));
// Prints: application/javascript;key=value
mime.params
#
Gets the MIMEParams
object representing the
parameters of the MIME. This property is read-only. See
MIMEParams
documentation for details.
mime.toString()
#
- Returns: <string>
The toString()
method on the MIMEType
object returns the serialized MIME.
Because of the need for standard compliance, this method does not allow users to customize the serialization process of the MIME.
mime.toJSON()
#
- Returns: <string>
Alias for mime.toString()
.
This method is automatically called when an MIMEType
object is serialized
with JSON.stringify()
.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const myMIMES = [
new MIMEType('image/png'),
new MIMEType('image/gif'),
];
console.log(JSON.stringify(myMIMES));
// Prints: ["image/png", "image/gif"]
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const myMIMES = [
new MIMEType('image/png'),
new MIMEType('image/gif'),
];
console.log(JSON.stringify(myMIMES));
// Prints: ["image/png", "image/gif"]
Class: util.MIMEParams
#
The MIMEParams
API provides read and write access to the parameters of a
MIMEType
.
Constructor: new MIMEParams()
#
Creates a new MIMEParams
object by with empty parameters
import { MIMEParams } from 'node:util';
const myParams = new MIMEParams();
const { MIMEParams } = require('node:util');
const myParams = new MIMEParams();
mimeParams.delete(name)
#
name
<string>
Remove all name-value pairs whose name is name
.
mimeParams.entries()
#
- Returns: <Iterator>
Returns an iterator over each of the name-value pairs in the parameters.
Each item of the iterator is a JavaScript Array
. The first item of the array
is the name
, the second item of the array is the value
.
mimeParams.get(name)
#
name
<string>- Returns: <string> | <null> A string or
null
if there is no name-value pair with the givenname
.
Returns the value of the first name-value pair whose name is name
. If there
are no such pairs, null
is returned.
mimeParams.has(name)
#
Returns true
if there is at least one name-value pair whose name is name
.
mimeParams.keys()
#
- Returns: <Iterator>
Returns an iterator over the names of each name-value pair.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=0;bar=1');
for (const name of params.keys()) {
console.log(name);
}
// Prints:
// foo
// bar
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=0;bar=1');
for (const name of params.keys()) {
console.log(name);
}
// Prints:
// foo
// bar
mimeParams.set(name, value)
#
Sets the value in the MIMEParams
object associated with name
to
value
. If there are any pre-existing name-value pairs whose names are name
,
set the first such pair's value to value
.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=0;bar=1');
params.set('foo', 'def');
params.set('baz', 'xyz');
console.log(params.toString());
// Prints: foo=def;bar=1;baz=xyz
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=0;bar=1');
params.set('foo', 'def');
params.set('baz', 'xyz');
console.log(params.toString());
// Prints: foo=def;bar=1;baz=xyz
mimeParams.values()
#
- Returns: <Iterator>
Returns an iterator over the values of each name-value pair.
mimeParams[@@iterator]()
#
- Returns: <Iterator>
Alias for mimeParams.entries()
.
import { MIMEType } from 'node:util';
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=bar;xyz=baz');
for (const [name, value] of params) {
console.log(name, value);
}
// Prints:
// foo bar
// xyz baz
const { MIMEType } = require('node:util');
const { params } = new MIMEType('text/plain;foo=bar;xyz=baz');
for (const [name, value] of params) {
console.log(name, value);
}
// Prints:
// foo bar
// xyz baz
util.parseArgs([config])
#
-
config
<Object> Used to provide arguments for parsing and to configure the parser.config
supports the following properties:args
<string[]> array of argument strings. Default:process.argv
withexecPath
andfilename
removed.options
<Object> Used to describe arguments known to the parser. Keys ofoptions
are the long names of options and values are an <Object> accepting the following properties:type
<string> Type of argument, which must be eitherboolean
orstring
.multiple
<boolean> Whether this option can be provided multiple times. Iftrue
, all values will be collected in an array. Iffalse
, values for the option are last-wins. Default:false
.short
<string> A single character alias for the option.default
<string> | <boolean> | <string[]> | <boolean[]> The default option value when it is not set by args. It must be of the same type as thetype
property. Whenmultiple
istrue
, it must be an array.
strict
<boolean> Should an error be thrown when unknown arguments are encountered, or when arguments are passed that do not match thetype
configured inoptions
. Default:true
.allowPositionals
<boolean> Whether this command accepts positional arguments. Default:false
ifstrict
istrue
, otherwisetrue
.allowNegative
<boolean> Iftrue
, allows explicitly setting boolean options tofalse
by prefixing the option name with--no-
. Default:false
.tokens
<boolean> Return the parsed tokens. This is useful for extending the built-in behavior, from adding additional checks through to reprocessing the tokens in different ways. Default:false
.
-
Returns: <Object> The parsed command line arguments:
values
<Object> A mapping of parsed option names with their <string> or <boolean> values.positionals
<string[]> Positional arguments.tokens
<Object[]> | <undefined> See parseArgs tokens section. Only returned ifconfig
includestokens: true
.
Provides a higher level API for command-line argument parsing than interacting
with process.argv
directly. Takes a specification for the expected arguments
and returns a structured object with the parsed options and positionals.
import { parseArgs } from 'node:util';
const args = ['-f', '--bar', 'b'];
const options = {
foo: {
type: 'boolean',
short: 'f',
},
bar: {
type: 'string',
},
};
const {
values,
positionals,
} = parseArgs({ args, options });
console.log(values, positionals);
// Prints: [Object: null prototype] { foo: true, bar: 'b' } []
const { parseArgs } = require('node:util');
const args = ['-f', '--bar', 'b'];
const options = {
foo: {
type: 'boolean',
short: 'f',
},
bar: {
type: 'string',
},
};
const {
values,
positionals,
} = parseArgs({ args, options });
console.log(values, positionals);
// Prints: [Object: null prototype] { foo: true, bar: 'b' } []
parseArgs
tokens
#
Detailed parse information is available for adding custom behaviors by
specifying tokens: true
in the configuration.
The returned tokens have properties describing:
- all tokens
- option tokens
name
<string> Long name of option.rawName
<string> How option used in args, like-f
of--foo
.value
<string> | <undefined> Option value specified in args. Undefined for boolean options.inlineValue
<boolean> | <undefined> Whether option value specified inline, like--foo=bar
.
- positional tokens
value
<string> The value of the positional argument in args (i.e.args[index]
).
- option-terminator token
The returned tokens are in the order encountered in the input args. Options
that appear more than once in args produce a token for each use. Short option
groups like -xy
expand to a token for each option. So -xxx
produces
three tokens.
For example, to add support for a negated option like --no-color
(which
allowNegative
supports when the option is of boolean
type), the returned
tokens can be reprocessed to change the value stored for the negated option.
import { parseArgs } from 'node:util';
const options = {
'color': { type: 'boolean' },
'no-color': { type: 'boolean' },
'logfile': { type: 'string' },
'no-logfile': { type: 'boolean' },
};
const { values, tokens } = parseArgs({ options, tokens: true });
// Reprocess the option tokens and overwrite the returned values.
tokens
.filter((token) => token.kind === 'option')
.forEach((token) => {
if (token.name.startsWith('no-')) {
// Store foo:false for --no-foo
const positiveName = token.name.slice(3);
values[positiveName] = false;
delete values[token.name];
} else {
// Resave value so last one wins if both --foo and --no-foo.
values[token.name] = token.value ?? true;
}
});
const color = values.color;
const logfile = values.logfile ?? 'default.log';
console.log({ logfile, color });
const { parseArgs } = require('node:util');
const options = {
'color': { type: 'boolean' },
'no-color': { type: 'boolean' },
'logfile': { type: 'string' },
'no-logfile': { type: 'boolean' },
};
const { values, tokens } = parseArgs({ options, tokens: true });
// Reprocess the option tokens and overwrite the returned values.
tokens
.filter((token) => token.kind === 'option')
.forEach((token) => {
if (token.name.startsWith('no-')) {
// Store foo:false for --no-foo
const positiveName = token.name.slice(3);
values[positiveName] = false;
delete values[token.name];
} else {
// Resave value so last one wins if both --foo and --no-foo.
values[token.name] = token.value ?? true;
}
});
const color = values.color;
const logfile = values.logfile ?? 'default.log';
console.log({ logfile, color });
Example usage showing negated options, and when an option is used multiple ways then last one wins.
$ node negate.js
{ logfile: 'default.log', color: undefined }
$ node negate.js --no-logfile --no-color
{ logfile: false, color: false }
$ node negate.js --logfile=test.log --color
{ logfile: 'test.log', color: true }
$ node negate.js --no-logfile --logfile=test.log --color --no-color
{ logfile: 'test.log', color: false }
util.parseEnv(content)
#
content
<string>
The raw contents of a .env
file.
- Returns: <Object>
Given an example .env
file:
const { parseEnv } = require('node:util');
parseEnv('HELLO=world\nHELLO=oh my\n');
// Returns: { HELLO: 'oh my' }
import { parseEnv } from 'node:util';
parseEnv('HELLO=world\nHELLO=oh my\n');
// Returns: { HELLO: 'oh my' }
util.promisify(original)
#
original
<Function>- Returns: <Function>
Takes a function following the common error-first callback style, i.e. taking
an (err, value) => ...
callback as the last argument, and returns a version
that returns promises.
const util = require('node:util');
const fs = require('node:fs');
const stat = util.promisify(fs.stat);
stat('.').then((stats) => {
// Do something with `stats`
}).catch((error) => {
// Handle the error.
});
Or, equivalently using async function
s:
const util = require('node:util');
const fs = require('node:fs');
const stat = util.promisify(fs.stat);
async function callStat() {
const stats = await stat('.');
console.log(`This directory is owned by ${stats.uid}`);
}
callStat();
If there is an original[util.promisify.custom]
property present, promisify
will return its value, see Custom promisified functions.
promisify()
assumes that original
is a function taking a callback as its
final argument in all cases. If original
is not a function, promisify()
will throw an error. If original
is a function but its last argument is not
an error-first callback, it will still be passed an error-first
callback as its last argument.
Using promisify()
on class methods or other methods that use this
may not
work as expected unless handled specially:
const util = require('node:util');
class Foo {
constructor() {
this.a = 42;
}
bar(callback) {
callback(null, this.a);
}
}
const foo = new Foo();
const naiveBar = util.promisify(foo.bar);
// TypeError: Cannot read property 'a' of undefined
// naiveBar().then(a => console.log(a));
naiveBar.call(foo).then((a) => console.log(a)); // '42'
const bindBar = naiveBar.bind(foo);
bindBar().then((a) => console.log(a)); // '42'
Custom promisified functions#
Using the util.promisify.custom
symbol one can override the return value of
util.promisify()
:
const util = require('node:util');
function doSomething(foo, callback) {
// ...
}
doSomething[util.promisify.custom] = (foo) => {
return getPromiseSomehow();
};
const promisified = util.promisify(doSomething);
console.log(promisified === doSomething[util.promisify.custom]);
// prints 'true'
This can be useful for cases where the original function does not follow the standard format of taking an error-first callback as the last argument.
For example, with a function that takes in
(foo, onSuccessCallback, onErrorCallback)
:
doSomething[util.promisify.custom] = (foo) => {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
doSomething(foo, resolve, reject);
});
};
If promisify.custom
is defined but is not a function, promisify()
will
throw an error.
util.promisify.custom
#
- <symbol> that can be used to declare custom promisified variants of functions, see Custom promisified functions.
In addition to being accessible through util.promisify.custom
, this
symbol is registered globally and can be
accessed in any environment as Symbol.for('nodejs.util.promisify.custom')
.
For example, with a function that takes in
(foo, onSuccessCallback, onErrorCallback)
:
const kCustomPromisifiedSymbol = Symbol.for('nodejs.util.promisify.custom');
doSomething[kCustomPromisifiedSymbol] = (foo) => {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
doSomething(foo, resolve, reject);
});
};
util.stripVTControlCharacters(str)
#
Returns str
with any ANSI escape codes removed.
console.log(util.stripVTControlCharacters('\u001B[4mvalue\u001B[0m'));
// Prints "value"
util.styleText(format, text[, options])
#
format
<string> | <Array> A text format or an Array of text formats defined inutil.inspect.colors
.text
<string> The text to to be formatted.options
<Object>
This function returns a formatted text considering the format
passed
for printing in a terminal. It is aware of the terminal's capabilities
and acts according to the configuration set via NO_COLORS
,
NODE_DISABLE_COLORS
and FORCE_COLOR
environment variables.
import { styleText } from 'node:util';
import { stderr } from 'node:process';
const successMessage = styleText('green', 'Success!');
console.log(successMessage);
const errorMessage = styleText(
'red',
'Error! Error!',
// Validate if process.stderr has TTY
{ stream: stderr },
);
console.error(successMessage);
const { styleText } = require('node:util');
const { stderr } = require('node:process');
const successMessage = styleText('green', 'Success!');
console.log(successMessage);
const errorMessage = styleText(
'red',
'Error! Error!',
// Validate if process.stderr has TTY
{ stream: stderr },
);
console.error(successMessage);
util.inspect.colors
also provides text formats such as italic
, and
underline
and you can combine both:
console.log(
util.styleText(['underline', 'italic'], 'My italic underlined message'),
);
When passing an array of formats, the order of the format applied is left to right so the following style might overwrite the previous one.
console.log(
util.styleText(['red', 'green'], 'text'), // green
);
The full list of formats can be found in modifiers.
Class: util.TextDecoder
#
An implementation of the WHATWG Encoding Standard TextDecoder
API.
const decoder = new TextDecoder();
const u8arr = new Uint8Array([72, 101, 108, 108, 111]);
console.log(decoder.decode(u8arr)); // Hello
WHATWG supported encodings#
Per the WHATWG Encoding Standard, the encodings supported by the
TextDecoder
API are outlined in the tables below. For each encoding,
one or more aliases may be used.
Different Node.js build configurations support different sets of encodings. (see Internationalization)
Encodings supported by default (with full ICU data)#
Encoding | Aliases |
---|---|
'ibm866' | '866' , 'cp866' , 'csibm866' |
'iso-8859-2' | 'csisolatin2' , 'iso-ir-101' , 'iso8859-2' , 'iso88592' , 'iso_8859-2' , 'iso_8859-2:1987' , 'l2' , 'latin2' |
'iso-8859-3' | 'csisolatin3' , 'iso-ir-109' , 'iso8859-3' , 'iso88593' , 'iso_8859-3' , 'iso_8859-3:1988' , 'l3' , 'latin3' |
'iso-8859-4' | 'csisolatin4' , 'iso-ir-110' , 'iso8859-4' , 'iso88594' , 'iso_8859-4' , 'iso_8859-4:1988' , 'l4' , 'latin4' |
'iso-8859-5' | 'csisolatincyrillic' , 'cyrillic' , 'iso-ir-144' , 'iso8859-5' , 'iso88595' , 'iso_8859-5' , 'iso_8859-5:1988' |
'iso-8859-6' | 'arabic' , 'asmo-708' , 'csiso88596e' , 'csiso88596i' , 'csisolatinarabic' , 'ecma-114' , 'iso-8859-6-e' , 'iso-8859-6-i' , 'iso-ir-127' , 'iso8859-6' , 'iso88596' , 'iso_8859-6' , 'iso_8859-6:1987' |
'iso-8859-7' | 'csisolatingreek' , 'ecma-118' , 'elot_928' , 'greek' , 'greek8' , 'iso-ir-126' , 'iso8859-7' , 'iso88597' , 'iso_8859-7' , 'iso_8859-7:1987' , 'sun_eu_greek' |
'iso-8859-8' | 'csiso88598e' , 'csisolatinhebrew' , 'hebrew' , 'iso-8859-8-e' , 'iso-ir-138' , 'iso8859-8' , 'iso88598' , 'iso_8859-8' , 'iso_8859-8:1988' , 'visual' |
'iso-8859-8-i' | 'csiso88598i' , 'logical' |
'iso-8859-10' | 'csisolatin6' , 'iso-ir-157' , 'iso8859-10' , 'iso885910' , 'l6' , 'latin6' |
'iso-8859-13' | 'iso8859-13' , 'iso885913' |
'iso-8859-14' | 'iso8859-14' , 'iso885914' |
'iso-8859-15' | 'csisolatin9' , 'iso8859-15' , 'iso885915' , 'iso_8859-15' , 'l9' |
'koi8-r' | 'cskoi8r' , 'koi' , 'koi8' , 'koi8_r' |
'koi8-u' | 'koi8-ru' |
'macintosh' | 'csmacintosh' , 'mac' , 'x-mac-roman' |
'windows-874' | 'dos-874' , 'iso-8859-11' , 'iso8859-11' , 'iso885911' , 'tis-620' |
'windows-1250' | 'cp1250' , 'x-cp1250' |
'windows-1251' | 'cp1251' , 'x-cp1251' |
'windows-1252' | 'ansi_x3.4-1968' , 'ascii' , 'cp1252' , 'cp819' , 'csisolatin1' , 'ibm819' , 'iso-8859-1' , 'iso-ir-100' , 'iso8859-1' , 'iso88591' , 'iso_8859-1' , 'iso_8859-1:1987' , 'l1' , 'latin1' , 'us-ascii' , 'x-cp1252' |
'windows-1253' | 'cp1253' , 'x-cp1253' |
'windows-1254' | 'cp1254' , 'csisolatin5' , 'iso-8859-9' , 'iso-ir-148' , 'iso8859-9' , 'iso88599' , 'iso_8859-9' , 'iso_8859-9:1989' , 'l5' , 'latin5' , 'x-cp1254' |
'windows-1255' | 'cp1255' , 'x-cp1255' |
'windows-1256' | 'cp1256' , 'x-cp1256' |
'windows-1257' | 'cp1257' , 'x-cp1257' |
'windows-1258' | 'cp1258' , 'x-cp1258' |
'x-mac-cyrillic' | 'x-mac-ukrainian' |
'gbk' | 'chinese' , 'csgb2312' , 'csiso58gb231280' , 'gb2312' , 'gb_2312' , 'gb_2312-80' , 'iso-ir-58' , 'x-gbk' |
'gb18030' | |
'big5' | 'big5-hkscs' , 'cn-big5' , 'csbig5' , 'x-x-big5' |
'euc-jp' | 'cseucpkdfmtjapanese' , 'x-euc-jp' |
'iso-2022-jp' | 'csiso2022jp' |
'shift_jis' | 'csshiftjis' , 'ms932' , 'ms_kanji' , 'shift-jis' , 'sjis' , 'windows-31j' , 'x-sjis' |
'euc-kr' | 'cseuckr' , 'csksc56011987' , 'iso-ir-149' , 'korean' , 'ks_c_5601-1987' , 'ks_c_5601-1989' , 'ksc5601' , 'ksc_5601' , 'windows-949' |
Encodings supported when Node.js is built with the small-icu
option#
Encoding | Aliases |
---|---|
'utf-8' | 'unicode-1-1-utf-8' , 'utf8' |
'utf-16le' | 'utf-16' |
'utf-16be' |
Encodings supported when ICU is disabled#
Encoding | Aliases |
---|---|
'utf-8' | 'unicode-1-1-utf-8' , 'utf8' |
'utf-16le' | 'utf-16' |
The 'iso-8859-16'
encoding listed in the WHATWG Encoding Standard
is not supported.
new TextDecoder([encoding[, options]])
#
encoding
<string> Identifies theencoding
that thisTextDecoder
instance supports. Default:'utf-8'
.options
<Object>fatal
<boolean>true
if decoding failures are fatal. This option is not supported when ICU is disabled (see Internationalization). Default:false
.ignoreBOM
<boolean> Whentrue
, theTextDecoder
will include the byte order mark in the decoded result. Whenfalse
, the byte order mark will be removed from the output. This option is only used whenencoding
is'utf-8'
,'utf-16be'
, or'utf-16le'
. Default:false
.
Creates a new TextDecoder
instance. The encoding
may specify one of the
supported encodings or an alias.
The TextDecoder
class is also available on the global object.
textDecoder.decode([input[, options]])
#
input
<ArrayBuffer> | <DataView> | <TypedArray> AnArrayBuffer
,DataView
, orTypedArray
instance containing the encoded data.options
<Object>stream
<boolean>true
if additional chunks of data are expected. Default:false
.
- Returns: <string>
Decodes the input
and returns a string. If options.stream
is true
, any
incomplete byte sequences occurring at the end of the input
are buffered
internally and emitted after the next call to textDecoder.decode()
.
If textDecoder.fatal
is true
, decoding errors that occur will result in a
TypeError
being thrown.
textDecoder.encoding
#
The encoding supported by the TextDecoder
instance.
textDecoder.fatal
#
The value will be true
if decoding errors result in a TypeError
being
thrown.
textDecoder.ignoreBOM
#
The value will be true
if the decoding result will include the byte order
mark.
Class: util.TextEncoder
#
An implementation of the WHATWG Encoding Standard TextEncoder
API. All
instances of TextEncoder
only support UTF-8 encoding.
const encoder = new TextEncoder();
const uint8array = encoder.encode('this is some data');
The TextEncoder
class is also available on the global object.
textEncoder.encode([input])
#
input
<string> The text to encode. Default: an empty string.- Returns: <Uint8Array>
UTF-8 encodes the input
string and returns a Uint8Array
containing the
encoded bytes.
textEncoder.encodeInto(src, dest)
#
src
<string> The text to encode.dest
<Uint8Array> The array to hold the encode result.- Returns: <Object>
UTF-8 encodes the src
string to the dest
Uint8Array and returns an object
containing the read Unicode code units and written UTF-8 bytes.
const encoder = new TextEncoder();
const src = 'this is some data';
const dest = new Uint8Array(10);
const { read, written } = encoder.encodeInto(src, dest);
textEncoder.encoding
#
The encoding supported by the TextEncoder
instance. Always set to 'utf-8'
.
util.toUSVString(string)
#
string
<string>
Returns the string
after replacing any surrogate code points
(or equivalently, any unpaired surrogate code units) with the
Unicode "replacement character" U+FFFD.
util.transferableAbortController()
#
Creates and returns an <AbortController> instance whose <AbortSignal> is marked
as transferable and can be used with structuredClone()
or postMessage()
.
util.transferableAbortSignal(signal)
#
signal
<AbortSignal>- Returns: <AbortSignal>
Marks the given <AbortSignal> as transferable so that it can be used with
structuredClone()
and postMessage()
.
const signal = transferableAbortSignal(AbortSignal.timeout(100));
const channel = new MessageChannel();
channel.port2.postMessage(signal, [signal]);
util.aborted(signal, resource)
#
signal
<AbortSignal>resource
<Object> Any non-null entity, reference to which is held weakly.- Returns: <Promise>
Listens to abort event on the provided signal
and
returns a promise that is fulfilled when the signal
is
aborted. If the passed resource
is garbage collected before the signal
is
aborted, the returned promise shall remain pending indefinitely.
const { aborted } = require('node:util');
const dependent = obtainSomethingAbortable();
aborted(dependent.signal, dependent).then(() => {
// Do something when dependent is aborted.
});
dependent.on('event', () => {
dependent.abort();
});
import { aborted } from 'node:util';
const dependent = obtainSomethingAbortable();
aborted(dependent.signal, dependent).then(() => {
// Do something when dependent is aborted.
});
dependent.on('event', () => {
dependent.abort();
});
util.types
#
util.types
provides type checks for different kinds of built-in objects.
Unlike instanceof
or Object.prototype.toString.call(value)
, these checks do
not inspect properties of the object that are accessible from JavaScript (like
their prototype), and usually have the overhead of calling into C++.
The result generally does not make any guarantees about what kinds of properties or behavior a value exposes in JavaScript. They are primarily useful for addon developers who prefer to do type checking in JavaScript.
The API is accessible via require('node:util').types
or require('node:util/types')
.
util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in ArrayBuffer
or
SharedArrayBuffer
instance.
See also util.types.isArrayBuffer()
and
util.types.isSharedArrayBuffer()
.
util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns true
util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer(new SharedArrayBuffer()); // Returns true
util.types.isArrayBufferView(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an instance of one of the ArrayBuffer
views, such as typed array objects or DataView
. Equivalent to
ArrayBuffer.isView()
.
util.types.isArrayBufferView(new Int8Array()); // true
util.types.isArrayBufferView(Buffer.from('hello world')); // true
util.types.isArrayBufferView(new DataView(new ArrayBuffer(16))); // true
util.types.isArrayBufferView(new ArrayBuffer()); // false
util.types.isArgumentsObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an arguments
object.
function foo() {
util.types.isArgumentsObject(arguments); // Returns true
}
util.types.isArrayBuffer(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in ArrayBuffer
instance.
This does not include SharedArrayBuffer
instances. Usually, it is
desirable to test for both; See util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer()
for that.
util.types.isArrayBuffer(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns true
util.types.isArrayBuffer(new SharedArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isAsyncFunction(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an async function.
This only reports back what the JavaScript engine is seeing;
in particular, the return value may not match the original source code if
a transpilation tool was used.
util.types.isAsyncFunction(function foo() {}); // Returns false
util.types.isAsyncFunction(async function foo() {}); // Returns true
util.types.isBigInt64Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a BigInt64Array
instance.
util.types.isBigInt64Array(new BigInt64Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isBigInt64Array(new BigUint64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isBigIntObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a BigInt object, e.g. created
by Object(BigInt(123))
.
util.types.isBigIntObject(Object(BigInt(123))); // Returns true
util.types.isBigIntObject(BigInt(123)); // Returns false
util.types.isBigIntObject(123); // Returns false
util.types.isBigUint64Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a BigUint64Array
instance.
util.types.isBigUint64Array(new BigInt64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isBigUint64Array(new BigUint64Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isBooleanObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a boolean object, e.g. created
by new Boolean()
.
util.types.isBooleanObject(false); // Returns false
util.types.isBooleanObject(true); // Returns false
util.types.isBooleanObject(new Boolean(false)); // Returns true
util.types.isBooleanObject(new Boolean(true)); // Returns true
util.types.isBooleanObject(Boolean(false)); // Returns false
util.types.isBooleanObject(Boolean(true)); // Returns false
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is any boxed primitive object, e.g. created
by new Boolean()
, new String()
or Object(Symbol())
.
For example:
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(false); // Returns false
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(new Boolean(false)); // Returns true
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(Symbol('foo')); // Returns false
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(Object(Symbol('foo'))); // Returns true
util.types.isBoxedPrimitive(Object(BigInt(5))); // Returns true
util.types.isCryptoKey(value)
#
Returns true
if value
is a <CryptoKey>, false
otherwise.
util.types.isDataView(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in DataView
instance.
const ab = new ArrayBuffer(20);
util.types.isDataView(new DataView(ab)); // Returns true
util.types.isDataView(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
See also ArrayBuffer.isView()
.
util.types.isDate(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Date
instance.
util.types.isDate(new Date()); // Returns true
util.types.isExternal(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a native External
value.
A native External
value is a special type of object that contains a
raw C++ pointer (void*
) for access from native code, and has no other
properties. Such objects are created either by Node.js internals or native
addons. In JavaScript, they are frozen objects with a
null
prototype.
#include <js_native_api.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
napi_value result;
static napi_value MyNapi(napi_env env, napi_callback_info info) {
int* raw = (int*) malloc(1024);
napi_status status = napi_create_external(env, (void*) raw, NULL, NULL, &result);
if (status != napi_ok) {
napi_throw_error(env, NULL, "napi_create_external failed");
return NULL;
}
return result;
}
...
DECLARE_NAPI_PROPERTY("myNapi", MyNapi)
...
const native = require('napi_addon.node');
const data = native.myNapi();
util.types.isExternal(data); // returns true
util.types.isExternal(0); // returns false
util.types.isExternal(new String('foo')); // returns false
For further information on napi_create_external
, refer to
napi_create_external()
.
util.types.isFloat32Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Float32Array
instance.
util.types.isFloat32Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isFloat32Array(new Float32Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isFloat32Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isFloat64Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Float64Array
instance.
util.types.isFloat64Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isFloat64Array(new Uint8Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isFloat64Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isGeneratorFunction(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a generator function.
This only reports back what the JavaScript engine is seeing;
in particular, the return value may not match the original source code if
a transpilation tool was used.
util.types.isGeneratorFunction(function foo() {}); // Returns false
util.types.isGeneratorFunction(function* foo() {}); // Returns true
util.types.isGeneratorObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a generator object as returned from a
built-in generator function.
This only reports back what the JavaScript engine is seeing;
in particular, the return value may not match the original source code if
a transpilation tool was used.
function* foo() {}
const generator = foo();
util.types.isGeneratorObject(generator); // Returns true
util.types.isInt8Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Int8Array
instance.
util.types.isInt8Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isInt8Array(new Int8Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isInt8Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isInt16Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Int16Array
instance.
util.types.isInt16Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isInt16Array(new Int16Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isInt16Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isInt32Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Int32Array
instance.
util.types.isInt32Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isInt32Array(new Int32Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isInt32Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isKeyObject(value)
#
Returns true
if value
is a <KeyObject>, false
otherwise.
util.types.isMap(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Map
instance.
util.types.isMap(new Map()); // Returns true
util.types.isMapIterator(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an iterator returned for a built-in
Map
instance.
const map = new Map();
util.types.isMapIterator(map.keys()); // Returns true
util.types.isMapIterator(map.values()); // Returns true
util.types.isMapIterator(map.entries()); // Returns true
util.types.isMapIterator(map[Symbol.iterator]()); // Returns true
util.types.isModuleNamespaceObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an instance of a Module Namespace Object.
import * as ns from './a.js';
util.types.isModuleNamespaceObject(ns); // Returns true
util.types.isNativeError(value)
#
Returns true
if the value was returned by the constructor of a
built-in Error
type.
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(new Error())); // true
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(new TypeError())); // true
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(new RangeError())); // true
Subclasses of the native error types are also native errors:
class MyError extends Error {}
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(new MyError())); // true
A value being instanceof
a native error class is not equivalent to isNativeError()
returning true
for that value. isNativeError()
returns true
for errors
which come from a different realm while instanceof Error
returns false
for these errors:
const vm = require('node:vm');
const context = vm.createContext({});
const myError = vm.runInContext('new Error()', context);
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(myError)); // true
console.log(myError instanceof Error); // false
Conversely, isNativeError()
returns false
for all objects which were not
returned by the constructor of a native error. That includes values
which are instanceof
native errors:
const myError = { __proto__: Error.prototype };
console.log(util.types.isNativeError(myError)); // false
console.log(myError instanceof Error); // true
util.types.isNumberObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a number object, e.g. created
by new Number()
.
util.types.isNumberObject(0); // Returns false
util.types.isNumberObject(new Number(0)); // Returns true
util.types.isPromise(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Promise
.
util.types.isPromise(Promise.resolve(42)); // Returns true
util.types.isProxy(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a Proxy
instance.
const target = {};
const proxy = new Proxy(target, {});
util.types.isProxy(target); // Returns false
util.types.isProxy(proxy); // Returns true
util.types.isRegExp(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a regular expression object.
util.types.isRegExp(/abc/); // Returns true
util.types.isRegExp(new RegExp('abc')); // Returns true
util.types.isSet(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Set
instance.
util.types.isSet(new Set()); // Returns true
util.types.isSetIterator(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is an iterator returned for a built-in
Set
instance.
const set = new Set();
util.types.isSetIterator(set.keys()); // Returns true
util.types.isSetIterator(set.values()); // Returns true
util.types.isSetIterator(set.entries()); // Returns true
util.types.isSetIterator(set[Symbol.iterator]()); // Returns true
util.types.isSharedArrayBuffer(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in SharedArrayBuffer
instance.
This does not include ArrayBuffer
instances. Usually, it is
desirable to test for both; See util.types.isAnyArrayBuffer()
for that.
util.types.isSharedArrayBuffer(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isSharedArrayBuffer(new SharedArrayBuffer()); // Returns true
util.types.isStringObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a string object, e.g. created
by new String()
.
util.types.isStringObject('foo'); // Returns false
util.types.isStringObject(new String('foo')); // Returns true
util.types.isSymbolObject(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a symbol object, created
by calling Object()
on a Symbol
primitive.
const symbol = Symbol('foo');
util.types.isSymbolObject(symbol); // Returns false
util.types.isSymbolObject(Object(symbol)); // Returns true
util.types.isTypedArray(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in TypedArray
instance.
util.types.isTypedArray(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isTypedArray(new Uint8Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isTypedArray(new Float64Array()); // Returns true
See also ArrayBuffer.isView()
.
util.types.isUint8Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Uint8Array
instance.
util.types.isUint8Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint8Array(new Uint8Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isUint8Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint8ClampedArray(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Uint8ClampedArray
instance.
util.types.isUint8ClampedArray(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint8ClampedArray(new Uint8ClampedArray()); // Returns true
util.types.isUint8ClampedArray(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint16Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Uint16Array
instance.
util.types.isUint16Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint16Array(new Uint16Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isUint16Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint32Array(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in Uint32Array
instance.
util.types.isUint32Array(new ArrayBuffer()); // Returns false
util.types.isUint32Array(new Uint32Array()); // Returns true
util.types.isUint32Array(new Float64Array()); // Returns false
util.types.isWeakMap(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in WeakMap
instance.
util.types.isWeakMap(new WeakMap()); // Returns true
util.types.isWeakSet(value)
#
Returns true
if the value is a built-in WeakSet
instance.
util.types.isWeakSet(new WeakSet()); // Returns true
Deprecated APIs#
The following APIs are deprecated and should no longer be used. Existing applications and modules should be updated to find alternative approaches.
util._extend(target, source)
#
Object.assign()
instead.The util._extend()
method was never intended to be used outside of internal
Node.js modules. The community found and used it anyway.
It is deprecated and should not be used in new code. JavaScript comes with very
similar built-in functionality through Object.assign()
.
util.isArray(object)
#
Array.isArray()
instead.Alias for Array.isArray()
.
Returns true
if the given object
is an Array
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('node:util');
util.isArray([]);
// Returns: true
util.isArray(new Array());
// Returns: true
util.isArray({});
// Returns: false