console: table() static method
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
The console.table()
static method displays tabular data as a table.
This function takes one mandatory argument data
, which must be an array or an object, and one additional optional parameter columns
.
It logs data
as a table. Each element in the array (or enumerable property if data
is an object) will be a row in the table.
The first column in the table will be labeled (index)
. If data
is an array, then its values will be the array indices. If data
is an object, then its values will be the property names. Note that (in Firefox) console.table
is limited to displaying 1000 rows (first row is the labeled index).
Collections of primitive types
The data
argument may be an array or an object.
// an array of strings
console.table(["apples", "oranges", "bananas"]);
(index) | Values |
---|---|
0 | 'apples' |
1 | 'oranges' |
2 | 'bananas' |
// an object whose properties are strings
function Person(firstName, lastName) {
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
const me = new Person("Tyrone", "Jones");
console.table(me);
(index) | Values |
---|---|
firstName | 'Tyrone' |
lastName | 'Jones' |
Collections of compound types
If the elements in the array, or properties in the object, are themselves arrays or objects, then their elements or properties are enumerated in the row, one per column:
// an array of arrays
const people = [
["Tyrone", "Jones"],
["Janet", "Smith"],
["Maria", "Cruz"],
];
console.table(people);
(index) | 0 | 1 |
---|---|---|
0 | 'Tyrone' | 'Jones' |
1 | 'Janet' | 'Smith' |
2 | 'Maria' | 'Cruz' |
// an array of objects
function Person(firstName, lastName) {
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
const tyrone = new Person("Tyrone", "Jones");
const janet = new Person("Janet", "Smith");
const maria = new Person("Maria", "Cruz");
console.table([tyrone, janet, maria]);
Note that if the array contains objects, then the columns are labeled with the property name.
(index) | firstName | lastName |
---|---|---|
0 | 'Tyrone' | 'Jones' |
1 | 'Janet' | 'Smith' |
2 | 'Maria' | 'Cruz' |
// an object whose properties are objects
const family = {};
family.mother = new Person("Janet", "Jones");
family.father = new Person("Tyrone", "Jones");
family.daughter = new Person("Maria", "Jones");
console.table(family);
(index) | firstName | lastName |
---|---|---|
daughter | 'Maria' | 'Jones' |
father | 'Tyrone' | 'Jones' |
mother | 'Janet' | 'Jones' |
Restricting the columns displayed
By default, console.table()
lists all elements in each row. You can use the optional columns
parameter to select a subset of columns to display:
// an array of objects, logging only firstName
function Person(firstName, lastName) {
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
const tyrone = new Person("Tyrone", "Jones");
const janet = new Person("Janet", "Smith");
const maria = new Person("Maria", "Cruz");
console.table([tyrone, janet, maria], ["firstName"]);
(index) | firstName |
---|---|
0 | 'Tyrone' |
1 | 'Janet' |
2 | 'Maria' |
Sorting columns
You can sort the table by a particular column by clicking on that column's label.
Syntax
table(data)
table(data, columns)
Parameters
Return value
None (undefined
).
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Console Standard # table |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser