Javascript: %s or %d represents string?
What you are seeing there is the string substitution patterns that are built into console.log()
or console.debug()
.
The pattern goes as I have presented below:
%s
for a String
%d
or %i
for Number
%f
for Floating points
%o
for an Object
%j
for an JSON
So essentially you are replacing the specifier with the values supplied as so:
var name = 'Chris';
console.log('Hi, my name is %s.', name);
// Hi, my name is Chris.
console.debug('Hi, my name is %s.', name);
// Hi, my name is Chris.
Docs:
- Docs for Chrome
- Docs for Firefox
- Docs for IE
- Docs for Node.js
- Docs for Spec
console.log()
and console.debug()
use printf-style formatting. Below are the officially supported formatters:
Formatter representation:
%O
Pretty-print an Object on multiple lines.%o
Pretty-print an Object all on a single line.%s
String.%d
Number (both integer and float).%j
JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references.%%
Single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument.
The results are written in the debug console. just open your command-line or terminal and run it using this:
node debug [script.js | -e "script" | <host>:<port>] command
%c
: You can give a style to log text with CSS .
console.log("%c YourText", "color:blue; font-weight:bold;");
You can create multiple style for different console log text.
console.log("%c Text1 %c Text2 %c Text3", "color:red;", "color:green;", "color:blue;");