The util
module is primarily designed to support the needs of Node.js' own internal APIs. However, many of the utilities are useful for application and module developers as well. It can be accessed using:
const util = require('util');
original
<Function> An async
functionTakes an async
function (or a function that returns a Promise) and returns a function following the Node.js error first callback style. 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.
For example:
const util = require('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
Note:
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 && err.hasOwnProperty('reason') && err.reason === null; // true });
section
<string> A string identifying the portion of the application for which the debuglog
function is being created.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.
For example:
const util = require('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.
Multiple comma-separated section
names may be specified in the NODE_DEBUG
environment variable. For example: NODE_DEBUG=fs,net,tls
.
The util.deprecate()
method wraps the given function
or class in such a way that it is marked as deprecated.
const util = require('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 process.on('warning')
event. By default, this warning will be emitted and printed to stderr
exactly once, the first time it is called. After the warning is emitted, the wrapped function
is called.
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
.
format
<string> A printf
-like format string.The util.format()
method returns a formatted string using the first argument as a printf
-like format.
The first argument is a string containing zero or more placeholder tokens. Each placeholder token is replaced with the converted value from the corresponding argument. Supported placeholders are:
%s
- String.%d
- Number (integer or floating point value).%i
- Integer.%f
- Floating point value.%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 to util.inspect()
with options { showHidden: true, depth: 4, showProxy: true }
. This will show the full object including non-enumerable symbols and properties.%O
- Object. A string representation of an object with generic JavaScript object formatting. Similar to util.inspect()
without options. This will show the full object not including non-enumerable symbols and properties.%%
- single percent sign ('%'
). This does not consume an argument.If the placeholder does not have a corresponding argument, the placeholder is not replaced.
util.format('%s:%s', 'foo'); // Returns: 'foo:%s'
If there are more arguments passed to the util.format()
method than the number of placeholders, the extra arguments are coerced into strings then concatenated to the returned string, each delimited by a space. Excessive arguments whose typeof
is 'object'
or 'symbol'
(except null
) will be transformed by util.inspect()
.
util.format('%s:%s', 'foo', 'bar', 'baz'); // 'foo:bar baz'
If the first argument is not a string then util.format()
returns a string that is the concatenation of all arguments separated by spaces. Each argument is converted to a string using util.inspect()
.
util.format(1, 2, 3); // '1 2 3'
If only one argument is passed to util.format()
, it is returned as it is without any formatting.
util.format('%% %s'); // '%% %s'
Note: 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.
constructor
<Function>
superConstructor
<Function>
Inherit the prototype methods from one constructor into another. The prototype of constructor
will be set to a new object created from superConstructor
.
As an additional convenience, superConstructor
will be accessible through the constructor.super_
property.
const util = require('util'); const EventEmitter = require('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: "${data}"`); }); stream.write('It works!'); // Received data: "It works!"
ES6 example using class
and extends
const EventEmitter = require('events'); class MyStream extends EventEmitter { write(data) { this.emit('data', data); } } const stream = new MyStream(); stream.on('data', (data) => { console.log(`Received data: "${data}"`); }); stream.write('With ES6');
object
<any> Any JavaScript primitive or Object.options
<Object>showHidden
<boolean> If true
, the object
's non-enumerable symbols and properties will be included in the formatted result. Defaults to false
.depth
<number> Specifies the number of times to recurse while formatting the object
. This is useful for inspecting large complicated objects. Defaults to 2
. To make it recurse indefinitely pass null
.colors
<boolean> If true
, the output will be styled with ANSI color codes. Defaults to false
. Colors are customizable, see Customizing util.inspect
colors.customInspect
<boolean> If false
, then custom inspect(depth, opts)
functions exported on the object
being inspected will not be called. Defaults to true
.showProxy
<boolean> If true
, then objects and functions that are Proxy
objects will be introspected to show their target
and handler
objects. Defaults to false
.maxArrayLength
<number> Specifies the maximum number of array and TypedArray
elements to include when formatting. Defaults to 100
. Set to null
to show all array elements. Set to 0
or negative to show no array elements.breakLength
<number> The length at which an object's keys are split across multiple lines. Set to Infinity
to format an object as a single line. Defaults to 60 for legacy compatibility.The util.inspect()
method returns a string representation of object
that is primarily useful for debugging. Additional options
may be passed that alter certain aspects of the formatted string.
The following example inspects all properties of the util
object:
const util = require('util'); console.log(util.inspect(util, { showHidden: true, depth: null }));
Values may supply their own custom inspect(depth, opts)
functions, when called these receive the current depth
in the recursive inspection, as well as the options object passed to util.inspect()
.
util.inspect
colorsColor 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:
number
- yellow
boolean
- yellow
string
- green
date
- magenta
regexp
- red
null
- bold
undefined
- grey
special
- cyan
(only applied to functions at this time)name
- (no styling)The predefined color codes are: white
, grey
, black
, blue
, cyan
, green
, magenta
, red
and yellow
. There are also bold
, italic
, underline
and inverse
codes.
Color styling uses ANSI control codes that may not be supported on all terminals.
Objects may also define their own [util.inspect.custom](depth, opts)
(or the equivalent but deprecated inspect(depth, opts)
) function that util.inspect()
will invoke and use the result of when inspecting the object:
const util = require('util'); class Box { constructor(value) { this.value = value; } [util.inspect.custom](depth, options) { 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 = util.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)
functions typically return a string but may return a value of any type that will be formatted accordingly by util.inspect()
.
const util = require('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' }"
A Symbol that can be used to declare custom inspect functions, see Custom inspection functions on Objects.
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('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
val1
<any>
val2
<any>
Returns true
if there is deep strict equality between val
and val2
. Otherwise, returns false
.
See assert.deepStrictEqual()
for more information about deep strict equality.
original
<Function>
Takes a function following the common Node.js callback style, i.e. taking a (err, value) => ...
callback as the last argument, and returns a version that returns promises.
For example:
const util = require('util'); const fs = require('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('util'); const fs = require('fs'); const stat = util.promisify(fs.stat); async function callStat() { const stats = await stat('.'); console.log(`This directory is owned by ${stats.uid}`); }
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, and the returned function will result in undefined behavior if it does not.
Using the util.promisify.custom
symbol one can override the return value of util.promisify()
:
const util = require('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); }); };
A Symbol that can be used to declare custom promisified variants of functions, see Custom promisified functions.
An implementation of the WHATWG Encoding Standard TextDecoder
API.
const decoder = new TextDecoder('shift_jis'); let string = ''; let buffer; while (buffer = getNextChunkSomehow()) { string += decoder.decode(buffer, { stream: true }); } string += decoder.decode(); // end-of-stream
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. While a very basic set of encodings is supported even on Node.js builds without ICU enabled, support for some encodings is provided only when Node.js is built with ICU and using the full ICU data (see Internationalization).
Encoding | Aliases |
---|---|
'utf-8' |
'unicode-1-1-utf-8' , 'utf8'
|
'utf-16le' | 'utf-16' |
Encoding | Aliases |
---|---|
'utf-8' |
'unicode-1-1-utf-8' , 'utf8'
|
'utf-16le' | 'utf-16' |
'utf-16be' |
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'
|
Note: The 'iso-8859-16'
encoding listed in the WHATWG Encoding Standard is not supported.
encoding
<string> Identifies the encoding
that this TextDecoder
instance supports. Defaults to 'utf-8'
.options
<Object>fatal
<boolean> true
if decoding failures are fatal. Defaults to false
. This option is only supported when ICU is enabled (see Internationalization).ignoreBOM
<boolean> When true
, the TextDecoder
will include the byte order mark in the decoded result. When false
, the byte order mark will be removed from the output. This option is only used when encoding
is 'utf-8'
, 'utf-16be'
or 'utf-16le'
. Defaults to false
.Creates an new TextDecoder
instance. The encoding
may specify one of the supported encodings or an alias.
input
<ArrayBuffer> | <DataView> | <TypedArray> An ArrayBuffer
, DataView
or Typed Array instance containing the encoded data.options
<Object>stream
<boolean> true
if additional chunks of data are expected. Defaults to false
.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.
The encoding supported by the TextDecoder
instance.
The value will be true
if decoding errors result in a TypeError
being thrown.
The value will be true
if the decoding result will include the byte order mark.
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');
input
<string> The text to encode. Defaults to an empty string.UTF-8 encodes the input
string and returns a Uint8Array
containing the encoded bytes.
The encoding supported by the TextEncoder
instance. Always set to 'utf-8'
.
The following APIs have been deprecated and should no longer be used. Existing applications and modules should be updated to find alternative approaches.
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()
.
console.error()
instead.string
<string> The message to print to stderr
Deprecated predecessor of console.error
.
console.error()
instead....strings
<string> The message to print to stderr
Deprecated predecessor of console.error
.
object
<any>
Internal alias for Array.isArray
.
Returns true
if the given object
is an Array
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isArray([]); // Returns: true util.isArray(new Array()); // Returns: true util.isArray({}); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Boolean
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isBoolean(1); // Returns: false util.isBoolean(0); // Returns: false util.isBoolean(false); // Returns: true
Buffer.isBuffer()
instead.object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Buffer
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isBuffer({ length: 0 }); // Returns: false util.isBuffer([]); // Returns: false util.isBuffer(Buffer.from('hello world')); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Date
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isDate(new Date()); // Returns: true util.isDate(Date()); // false (without 'new' returns a String) util.isDate({}); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is an Error
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isError(new Error()); // Returns: true util.isError(new TypeError()); // Returns: true util.isError({ name: 'Error', message: 'an error occurred' }); // Returns: false
Note that this method relies on Object.prototype.toString()
behavior. It is possible to obtain an incorrect result when the object
argument manipulates @@toStringTag
.
const util = require('util'); const obj = { name: 'Error', message: 'an error occurred' }; util.isError(obj); // Returns: false obj[Symbol.toStringTag] = 'Error'; util.isError(obj); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Function
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); function Foo() {} const Bar = () => {}; util.isFunction({}); // Returns: false util.isFunction(Foo); // Returns: true util.isFunction(Bar); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is strictly null
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isNull(0); // Returns: false util.isNull(undefined); // Returns: false util.isNull(null); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is null
or undefined
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isNullOrUndefined(0); // Returns: false util.isNullOrUndefined(undefined); // Returns: true util.isNullOrUndefined(null); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Number
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isNumber(false); // Returns: false util.isNumber(Infinity); // Returns: true util.isNumber(0); // Returns: true util.isNumber(NaN); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is strictly an Object
and not a Function
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isObject(5); // Returns: false util.isObject(null); // Returns: false util.isObject({}); // Returns: true util.isObject(() => {}); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a primitive type. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isPrimitive(5); // Returns: true util.isPrimitive('foo'); // Returns: true util.isPrimitive(false); // Returns: true util.isPrimitive(null); // Returns: true util.isPrimitive(undefined); // Returns: true util.isPrimitive({}); // Returns: false util.isPrimitive(() => {}); // Returns: false util.isPrimitive(/^$/); // Returns: false util.isPrimitive(new Date()); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a RegExp
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isRegExp(/some regexp/); // Returns: true util.isRegExp(new RegExp('another regexp')); // Returns: true util.isRegExp({}); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a string
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isString(''); // Returns: true util.isString('foo'); // Returns: true util.isString(String('foo')); // Returns: true util.isString(5); // Returns: false
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is a Symbol
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); util.isSymbol(5); // Returns: false util.isSymbol('foo'); // Returns: false util.isSymbol(Symbol('foo')); // Returns: true
object
<any>
Returns true
if the given object
is undefined
. Otherwise, returns false
.
const util = require('util'); const foo = undefined; util.isUndefined(5); // Returns: false util.isUndefined(foo); // Returns: true util.isUndefined(null); // Returns: false
string
<string>
The util.log()
method prints the given string
to stdout
with an included timestamp.
const util = require('util'); util.log('Timestamped message.');
console.log()
instead.Deprecated predecessor of console.log
.
console.log()
instead.Deprecated predecessor of console.log
.
© Joyent, Inc. and other Node contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
Node.js is a trademark of Joyent, Inc. and is used with its permission.
We are not endorsed by or affiliated with Joyent.
https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v9.x/docs/api/util.html