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Error

Error objects are thrown when runtime errors occur. The Error object can also be used as a base object for user-defined exceptions. See below for standard built-in error types.

Description

Runtime errors result in new Error objects being created and thrown.

Error types

Besides the generic Error constructor, there are other core error constructors in JavaScript. For client-side exceptions, see Exception handling statements.

EvalError

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs regarding the global function eval().

RangeError

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs when a numeric variable or parameter is outside of its valid range.

ReferenceError

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs when de-referencing an invalid reference.

SyntaxError

Creates an instance representing a syntax error.

TypeError

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs when a variable or parameter is not of a valid type.

URIError

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs when encodeURI() or decodeURI() are passed invalid parameters.

AggregateError

Creates an instance representing several errors wrapped in a single error when multiple errors need to be reported by an operation, for example by Promise.any().

InternalError Non-Standard

Creates an instance representing an error that occurs when an internal error in the JavaScript engine is thrown. E.g. "too much recursion".

Constructor

Error()

Creates a new Error object.

Static methods

Error.captureStackTrace()

A non-standard V8 function that creates the stack property on an Error instance.

Instance properties

Error.prototype.message

Error message.

Error.prototype.name

Error name.

Error.prototype.description Non-Standard

A non-standard Microsoft property for the error description. Similar to message.

Error.prototype.number Non-Standard

A non-standard Microsoft property for an error number.

Error.prototype.fileName Non-Standard

A non-standard Mozilla property for the path to the file that raised this error.

Error.prototype.lineNumber Non-Standard

A non-standard Mozilla property for the line number in the file that raised this error.

Error.prototype.columnNumber Non-Standard

A non-standard Mozilla property for the column number in the line that raised this error.

Error.prototype.stack Non-Standard

A non-standard Mozilla property for a stack trace.

Instance methods

Error.prototype.toString()

Returns a string representing the specified object. Overrides the Object.prototype.toString() method.

Examples

Throwing a generic error

Usually you create an Error object with the intention of raising it using the throw keyword. You can handle the error using the try...catch construct:

try {
  throw new Error('Whoops!')
} catch (e) {
  console.error(e.name + ': ' + e.message)
}

Handling a specific error type

You can choose to handle only specific error types by testing the error type with the error's constructor property or, if you're writing for modern JavaScript engines, instanceof keyword:

try {
  foo.bar()
} catch (e) {
  if (e instanceof EvalError) {
    console.error(e.name + ': ' + e.message)
  } else if (e instanceof RangeError) {
    console.error(e.name + ': ' + e.message)
  }
  // ... etc

  else {
    // If none of our cases matched leave the Error unhandled
    throw e;
  }
}

Differentiate between similar errors

Sometimes a block of code can fail for reasons that require different handling, but which throw very similar errors (i.e. with the same type and message).

If you don't have control over the original errors that are thrown, one option is to catch them and throw new Error objects that have more specific messages. The original error should be passed to the new Error in the constructor option parameter (cause property), as this ensures that the original error and stack trace are available to higher level try/catch blocks.

The example below shows this for two methods that would otherwise fail with similar errors (doFailSomeWay() and doFailAnotherWay()):

function doWork() {
  try {
    doFailSomeWay();
  } catch (err) {
    throw new Error('Failed in some way', { cause: err });
  }
  try {
    doFailAnotherWay();
  } catch (err) {
    throw new Error('Failed in another way', { cause: err });
  }
}

try {
  doWork();
} catch (err) {
  switch(err.message) {
    case 'Failed in some way':
      handleFailSomeWay(err.cause);
      break;
    case 'Failed in another way':
      handleFailAnotherWay(err.cause);
      break;
  }
}

You can also use the cause property in custom error types, provided the subclasses' constructor passes the options parameter when calling super():

class MyError extends Error {
  constructor(/* some arguments */) {
    // Needs to pass both `message` and `options` to install the "cause" property. 
    super(message, options);
  }
}

Custom Error Types

You might want to define your own error types deriving from Error to be able to throw new MyError() and use instanceof MyError to check the kind of error in the exception handler. This results in cleaner and more consistent error handling code.

See "What's a good way to extend Error in JavaScript?" on StackOverflow for an in-depth discussion.

ES6 Custom Error Class

Warning: Versions of Babel prior to 7 can handle CustomError class methods, but only when they are declared with Object.defineProperty(). Otherwise, old versions of Babel and other transpilers will not correctly handle the following code without additional configuration.

Note: Some browsers include the CustomError constructor in the stack trace when using ES2015 classes.

class CustomError extends Error {
  constructor(foo = 'bar', ...params) {
    // Pass remaining arguments (including vendor specific ones) to parent constructor
    super(...params)

    // Maintains proper stack trace for where our error was thrown (only available on V8)
    if (Error.captureStackTrace) {
      Error.captureStackTrace(this, CustomError)
    }

    this.name = 'CustomError'
    // Custom debugging information
    this.foo = foo
    this.date = new Date()
  }
}

try {
  throw new CustomError('baz', 'bazMessage')
} catch(e) {
  console.error(e.name)    //CustomError
  console.error(e.foo)     //baz
  console.error(e.message) //bazMessage
  console.error(e.stack)   //stacktrace
}

ES5 Custom Error Object

Warning: All browsers include the CustomError constructor in the stack trace when using a prototypal declaration.

function CustomError(foo, message, fileName, lineNumber) {
  var instance = new Error(message, fileName, lineNumber);
  instance.name = 'CustomError';
  instance.foo = foo;
  Object.setPrototypeOf(instance, Object.getPrototypeOf(this));
  if (Error.captureStackTrace) {
    Error.captureStackTrace(instance, CustomError);
  }
  return instance;
}

CustomError.prototype = Object.create(Error.prototype, {
  constructor: {
    value: Error,
    enumerable: false,
    writable: true,
    configurable: true
  }
});

if (Object.setPrototypeOf){
  Object.setPrototypeOf(CustomError, Error);
} else {
  CustomError.__proto__ = Error;
}

try {
  throw new CustomError('baz', 'bazMessage');
} catch(e){
  console.error(e.name); //CustomError
  console.error(e.foo); //baz
  console.error(e.message); //bazMessage
}

Specifications

Browser compatibility

Desktop Mobile Server
Chrome Edge Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari WebView Android Chrome Android Firefox for Android Opera Android Safari on IOS Samsung Internet Deno Node.js
Error
1
12
1
6
4
1
1
18
4
10.1
1
1.0
1.0
0.10.0
Error
1
12
1
6
4
1
1
18
4
10.1
1
1.0
1.0
0.10.0
cause
93
93
91
No
No
15
93
93
91
No
15
17.0
1.13
16.9.0
columnNumber
No
No
1
No
No
No
No
No
4
No
No
No
No
No
fileName
No
No
1
No
No
No
No
No
4
No
No
No
No
No
lineNumber
No
No
1
No
No
No
No
No
4
No
No
No
No
No
message
1
12
1
6
5
1
1
18
4
10.1
1
1.0
1.0
0.10.0
name
1
12
1
6
4
1
1
18
4
10.1
1
1.0
1.0
0.10.0
stack
3
12
1
10
10.5
6
≤37
18
4
11
6
1.0
1.0
0.10.0
toSource
No
No
1-74
Starting in Firefox 74, toSource() is no longer available for use by web content. It is still allowed for internal and privileged code.
No
No
No
No
No
4
No
No
No
No
No
toString
1
12
1
6
4
1
1
18
4
10.1
1
1.0
1.0
0.10.0

See also

© 2005–2022 MDN contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Error