Object.prototype.toString()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The toString()
method of Object
instances returns a string representing this object. This method is meant to be overridden by derived objects for custom type coercion logic.
Try it
Syntax
toString()
Parameters
By default toString()
takes no parameters. However, objects that inherit from Object
may override it with their own implementations that do take parameters. For example, the Number.prototype.toString()
and BigInt.prototype.toString()
methods take an optional radix
parameter.
Return value
A string representing the object.
Description
JavaScript calls the toString
method to convert an object to a primitive value. You rarely need to invoke the toString
method yourself; JavaScript automatically invokes it when encountering an object where a primitive value is expected.
This method is called in priority by string conversion, but numeric conversion and primitive conversion call valueOf()
in priority. However, because the base valueOf()
method returns an object, the toString()
method is usually called in the end, unless the object overrides valueOf()
. For example, +[1]
returns 1
, because its toString()
method returns "1"
, which is then converted to a number.
All objects that inherit from Object.prototype
(that is, all except null
-prototype objects) inherit the toString()
method. When you create a custom object, you can override toString()
to call a custom method, so that your custom object can be converted to a string value. Alternatively, you can add a [Symbol.toPrimitive]()
method, which allows even more control over the conversion process, and will always be preferred over valueOf
or toString
for any type conversion.
To use the base Object.prototype.toString()
with an object that has it overridden (or to invoke it on null
or undefined
), you need to call Function.prototype.call()
or Function.prototype.apply()
on it, passing the object you want to inspect as the first parameter (called thisArg
).
const arr = [1, 2, 3];
arr.toString(); // "1,2,3"
Object.prototype.toString.call(arr); // "[object Array]"
Object.prototype.toString()
returns "[object Type]"
, where Type
is the object type. If the object has a Symbol.toStringTag
property whose value is a string, that value will be used as the Type
. Many built-in objects, including Map
and Symbol
, have a Symbol.toStringTag
. Some objects predating ES6 do not have Symbol.toStringTag
, but have a special tag nonetheless. They include (the tag is the same as the type name given below):
The arguments
object returns "[object Arguments]"
. Everything else, including user-defined classes, unless with a custom Symbol.toStringTag
, will return "[object Object]"
.
Object.prototype.toString()
invoked on null
and undefined
returns [object Null]
and [object Undefined]
, respectively.
Examples
Overriding toString for custom objects
You can create a function to be called in place of the default toString()
method. The toString()
function you create should return a string value. If it returns an object and the method is called implicitly during type conversion, then its result is ignored and the value of a related method, valueOf()
, is used instead, or a TypeError
is thrown if none of these methods return a primitive.
The following code defines a Dog
class.
class Dog {
constructor(name, breed, color, sex) {
this.name = name;
this.breed = breed;
this.color = color;
this.sex = sex;
}
}
If you call the toString()
method, either explicitly or implicitly, on an instance of Dog
, it returns the default value inherited from Object
:
const theDog = new Dog("Gabby", "Lab", "chocolate", "female");
theDog.toString(); // "[object Object]"
`${theDog}`; // "[object Object]"
The following code overrides the default toString()
method. This method generates a string containing the name
, breed
, color
, and sex
of the object.
class Dog {
constructor(name, breed, color, sex) {
this.name = name;
this.breed = breed;
this.color = color;
this.sex = sex;
}
toString() {
return `Dog ${this.name} is a ${this.sex} ${this.color} ${this.breed}`;
}
}
With the preceding code in place, any time an instance of Dog
is used in a string context, JavaScript automatically calls the toString()
method.
const theDog = new Dog("Gabby", "Lab", "chocolate", "female");
`${theDog}`; // "Dog Gabby is a female chocolate Lab"
Using toString() to detect object class
toString()
can be used with every object and (by default) allows you to get its class.
const toString = Object.prototype.toString;
toString.call(new Date()); // [object Date]
toString.call(new String()); // [object String]
// Math has its Symbol.toStringTag
toString.call(Math); // [object Math]
toString.call(undefined); // [object Undefined]
toString.call(null); // [object Null]
Using toString()
in this way is unreliable; objects can change the behavior of Object.prototype.toString()
by defining a Symbol.toStringTag
property, leading to unexpected results. For example:
const myDate = new Date();
Object.prototype.toString.call(myDate); // [object Date]
myDate[Symbol.toStringTag] = "myDate";
Object.prototype.toString.call(myDate); // [object myDate]
Date.prototype[Symbol.toStringTag] = "prototype polluted";
Object.prototype.toString.call(new Date()); // [object prototype polluted]
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-object.prototype.tostring |
Browser compatibility
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