Error.prototype.stack

Non-standard: This feature is non-standard and is not on a standards track. Do not use it on production sites facing the Web: it will not work for every user. There may also be large incompatibilities between implementations and the behavior may change in the future.

Note: The stack property is de facto implemented by all major JavaScript engines, and the JavaScript standards committee is looking to standardize it. You cannot rely on the precise content of the stack string due to implementation inconsistencies, but you can generally assume it exists and use it for debugging purposes.

The non-standard stack property of an Error instance offers a trace of which functions were called, in what order, from which line and file, and with what arguments. The stack string proceeds from the most recent calls to earlier ones, leading back to the original global scope call.

Value

A string.

Because the stack property is non-standard, implementations differ about where it's installed.

  • In Firefox, it's an accessor property on Error.prototype.
  • In Chrome and Safari, it's a data property on each Error instance, with the descriptor:
Property attributes of Error.prototype.stack
Writable yes
Enumerable no
Configurable yes

Description

Each JavaScript engine uses its own format for stack traces, but they are fairly consistent in their high-level structure. Every implementation uses a separate line in the stack to represent each function call. The call that directly caused the error is placed at the top, and the call that started the whole call chain is placed at the bottom. Below are some examples of stack traces:

js
function foo() {
  bar();
}

function bar() {
  baz();
}

function baz() {
  console.log(new Error().stack);
}

foo();
#### JavaScriptCore
baz@filename.js:10:24
bar@filename.js:6:6
foo@filename.js:2:6
global code@filename.js:13:4

#### SpiderMonkey
baz@filename.js:10:15
bar@filename.js:6:3
foo@filename.js:2:3
@filename.js:13:1

#### V8
Error
    at baz (filename.js:10:15)
    at bar (filename.js:6:3)
    at foo (filename.js:2:3)
    at filename.js:13:1

Different engines set this value at different times. Most modern engines set it when the Error object is created. This means you can get the full call stack information within a function using the following:

js
function foo() {
  console.log(new Error().stack);
}

Without having to throw an error and then catch it.

In V8, the non-standard Error.captureStackTrace(), Error.stackTraceLimit, and Error.prepareStackTrace() APIs can be used to customize the stack trace. Read the Stack trace API in the V8 docs for more information.

Stack frames can be things other than explicit function calls, too. For example, event listeners, timeout jobs, and promise handlers all begin their own call chain. Source code within eval() and Function constructor calls also appear in the stack:

js
console.log(new Function("return new Error('Function failed')")().stack);
console.log("====");
console.log(eval("new Error('eval failed')").stack);
#### JavaScriptCore
anonymous@
global code@filename.js:1:65
====
eval code@
eval@[native code]
global code@filename.js:3:17

#### SpiderMonkey
anonymous@filename.js line 1 > Function:1:8
@filename.js:1:65

====
@filename.js line 3 > eval:1:1
@filename.js:3:13

#### V8
Error: Function failed
    at eval (eval at <anonymous> (filename.js:1:13), <anonymous>:1:8)
    at filename.js:1:65
====
Error: eval failed
    at eval (eval at <anonymous> (filename.js:3:13), <anonymous>:1:1)
    at filename.js:3:13

In Firefox, you can use the //# sourceURL directive to name an eval source. See the Firefox Debug eval sources docs and the Naming eval Scripts with the //# sourceURL Directive blog post for more details.

Examples

Using the stack property

The following script demonstrates how to use the stack property to output a stack trace into your browser window. You can use this to check what your browser's stack structure looks like.

js
function trace() {
  throw new Error("trace() failed");
}
function b() {
  trace();
}
function a() {
  b(3, 4, "\n\n", undefined, {});
}
try {
  a("first call, first arg");
} catch (e) {
  document.getElementById("output").textContent = e.stack;
}

Specifications

Not part of any standard.

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also