Symbol.toStringTag

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2015.

The Symbol.toStringTag static data property represents the well-known symbol Symbol.toStringTag. Object.prototype.toString() looks up this symbol on the this value for the property containing a string that represents the type of the object.

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Value

The well-known symbol Symbol.toStringTag.

Property attributes of Symbol.toStringTag
Writableno
Enumerableno
Configurableno

Examples

Default tags

Some values do not have Symbol.toStringTag, but have special toString() representations. For a complete list, see Object.prototype.toString().

js
Object.prototype.toString.call("foo"); // "[object String]"
Object.prototype.toString.call([1, 2]); // "[object Array]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(3); // "[object Number]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(true); // "[object Boolean]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(undefined); // "[object Undefined]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(null); // "[object Null]"
// ... and more

Built-in toStringTag symbols

Most built-in objects provide their own [Symbol.toStringTag] property. Almost all built-in objects' [Symbol.toStringTag] property is not writable, not enumerable, and configurable; the exception is Iterator, which is writable for compatibility reasons.

For constructor objects like Promise, the property is installed on Constructor.prototype, so that all instances of the constructor inherit [Symbol.toStringTag] and can be stringified. For non-constructor objects like Math and JSON, the property is installed as a static property, so that the namespace object itself can be stringified. Sometimes, the constructor also provides its own toString method (for example, Intl.Locale), in which case the [Symbol.toStringTag] property is only used when you explicitly call Object.prototype.toString on it.

js
Object.prototype.toString.call(new Map()); // "[object Map]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(function* () {}); // "[object GeneratorFunction]"
Object.prototype.toString.call(Promise.resolve()); // "[object Promise]"
// ... and more

Custom tag with toStringTag

When creating your own class, JavaScript defaults to the "Object" tag:

js
class ValidatorClass {}

Object.prototype.toString.call(new ValidatorClass()); // "[object Object]"

Now, with the help of toStringTag, you are able to set your own custom tag:

js
class ValidatorClass {
  get [Symbol.toStringTag]() {
    return "Validator";
  }
}

Object.prototype.toString.call(new ValidatorClass()); // "[object Validator]"

toStringTag available on all DOM prototype objects

Due to a WebIDL spec change in mid-2020, browsers are adding a Symbol.toStringTag property to all DOM prototype objects. For example, to access the Symbol.toStringTag property on HTMLButtonElement:

js
const test = document.createElement("button");
test.toString(); // "[object HTMLButtonElement]"
test[Symbol.toStringTag]; // "HTMLButtonElement"

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript Language Specification
# sec-symbol.tostringtag

Browser compatibility

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See also