I have a problem, I want to move value of Object[0] nazwa, which is a result of query (let's say "ab" in this case) to another variable, however I'm new to red node and JS, so I don't know how to do it. Could anyone be so kind and would help me? Right now I have it in function like so:
global.set("zmienna",msg.payload.Object[0].nazwa)
but it does not work.
global.set("zmienna", msg.payload2[0].nazwa);
Explained:
I see from your debug console that payload2 is an array, while
payload is a string, so you are probably referring to that
variable.
The object you see on the right side of your variable in console is
the type of the variable, not it's name, so you shouldn't use it
to access your values.
Related
I'm trying to console.log a variable's value but on the browser console instead of printing the variable (an object in my case), I am getting a Proxy container with format like
Proxy {}[[Handler]]: En[[Target]]: Array(0)[[IsRevoked]]: false
On opening the [[Handler]], I get some inner properties which contains an originalTarget property.
On expanding the originalTarget , my data is shown.
How do I get this data to show properly in console and also access it in my LWC ?
this.variableName returns value in a Proxy
If you want to view proxy data so use this :
JSON.stringify(this.caseList)
And further if you want to use it in your lwc use this:
let cases = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(this.caseList))
console.log(cases);
I hope you find the above solution helpful. If it does, please mark it as Best Answer to help others too.
Reason : whenever we mark any Javascript object as #track, Salesforce wraps the object inside creating proxy objects.
Solution: #Rajat Jaiswal answer.
I fetch an array that is stored in mongoose with ObjectIds. After I output this array through the console I get the following output:
["5a5f7199105cc908e874d74b","5a5f9199105cc908e874d74b"]
At the same time fetch a different object from mongoose. If I output the ObjectId of this object through the console (object.id) I get the following output:
5a5f7199105cc908e874d74b
I try to check whether the value is contained in the array or not. My code looks like this:
myArray.includes(myObject.id)
and I expect to have the result of true. Unfortunately, I get false as a result even though The value is in the array. Maybe it has to deal with the OBject Type? I really do not know how to solve this. Thanks.
Because in case of Array ["5a5f7199105cc908e874d74b","5a5f9199105cc908e874d74b"] - typeof values is String, so you operate with strings, while when you operate with object property(myObject.id) - you, probably, operate with ObjectID, which is default for latest MongoDBs. Anyway, we need to see your code and know your DB version etc. Easiest way to check is run code "typeof myObject.id", and if you see not "string" - this is an answer to your question.
I must be missing something pretty standard here.
I have a map mapping string to object. What I write out:
console.log(playerMap, this.id(), playerMap[this.id()]);
What it prints out:
this does not make a lot of sense to me since the key seems to be right there.
Fiddle
Based on your Fiddle, apparently your playerMap is not yet initialised when you new FeedViewModel(), if you change your console.log to
console.log(Object.keys(playerMap).length, this.id(), playerMap[this.id()]);
you will see the object is empty
> 0 "123243df6" undefined
It's always confused when you console.log object because the object displayed is only resolved when you expand the > in the console. It is not the state of the object when you console.log'd the object.
I realy cant understand javascript. Maybe someone can explain me the difference:
validationErrors[value.element.name] = value.method;
console.log(validationErrors);
alert(validationErrors);
console.log(validationErrors) returns well formed array with values, and alert(validationErrors) returns empty array. Why?
The console is more of a debugging environment and can understand the JS objects that are passed in the log function.
Alert on the other hand is a dialog box and will coerce its arguments into string values. Which is why the output is not as well formatted as the console.
Here is a little snippet of what is actually happening in the alert box.
var validationErrors = [ 2, 3, 4 ];
console.log(toString(validationErrors));
Output >> "[object Window]"
It's also best practice to use the console for logging purposes and not the alert box.
you can try this
alert(JSON.stringify(validationErrors));
Alert have some limit according to browser it varies but most You'd probably be best staying under 1000 characters though, as many browsers seem to begin to truncate after 999.
And if you are giving object in alert it will never reflect the values so prefer console for object and other data type can be used in alert but its not a good practice.
console give proper view of data like object in array can be studied easily in console.
Alert is used to print messages, which means it is used to display string values. When you pass anything other than string to alert, it calls .toString function of it and prints the output.
Now why did you get a blank string?
An array is supposed to have indexed values only. So you can do array[index] = "bla bla". But when you do array["something"] = "something else", it adds a property to that array (since arrays are also objects in Javascript).
According to MDN
The toString() method returns a string representing the specified array and its elements.
In simple, it will loop over length of array and join all elements with ,(comma)
But you do not have elements in it. You have set properties. So length is 0 and hence it returns ""
Following is a simulation
var a = [];
a["test"] = "foo";
console.log(a);
console.log(a.toString());
alert({})
Reference
Alert
Array.prototype.toString
All objects in Javascript are passed by reference. So when you passed something to console.log() and it would be changed in code further, in console you will see changed value. On other hand, alert() displays message box and stops code execution, so in message box you see values exactly as they are at alert()'s call time.
For debugging purposes, you may want to use browser's debugger - I recommend Chrome Dev tools. There is free course from codeschool.com to help you discover such great tool: https://www.codeschool.com/courses/discover-devtools
Please help me in printing the complete object using console.log method. If I am simply putting the name of the object it simply prints [object] [object]. But I want to print the object with complete hierarchy.
For an example, I am getting object in the following method,
getObject : function(responseObj) {
console.log('Object hierarchy is'+responseObj)
}
This simply returns [object] but I want to see the complete hierarchy in the developer tools. Please see, I am using sencha.
Use console.dir, and don't concatenate...
console.dir( responseObj );
Or if you want a label, use a comma to pass multiple arguments.
console.log('Object hierarchy is:', responseObj)
The problem here is that you are concatenating an object onto a string, so it's not doing what you are expecting. Instead of putting it all into one console.log call, do two, the first with the text you want, and the second with just the name of the object in it.
getObject : function(responseObj) {
console.log('Object hierarchy is:');
console.log(responseObj);
}
edit:
If you are logging into a text/non-interactive console, that doesnt let you explore the object, you'll need to implement a custom inspection function, something like this gist will get you started. What this is doing is echoing out the property name, and the value it finds step by step, but pay attention to what it says there about scoping.
edit edit:
didn't know about console.log taking multiple parameters, never needed it :o handy though!