The ReferenceError object represents an error when a non-existent variable is referenced.
Syntax
new ReferenceError([message[, fileName[, lineNumber]]])
Parameters
message- Optional. Human-readable description of the error
fileName- Optional. The name of the file containing the code that caused the exception
lineNumber- Optional. The line number of the code that caused the exception
Description
A ReferenceError is thrown when trying to dereference a variable that has not been declared.
Properties
ReferenceError.prototype- Allows the addition of properties to an
ReferenceErrorobject.
ReferenceError instances
Properties
ReferenceError.prototype.constructor- Specifies the function that created an instance's prototype.
ReferenceError.prototype.message- Error message. Although ECMA-262 specifies that
ReferenceErrorshould provide its ownmessageproperty, in SpiderMonkey, it inheritsError.prototype.message. ReferenceError.prototype.name- Error name. Inherited from
Error. ReferenceError.prototype.fileName- Path to file that raised this error. Inherited from
Error. ReferenceError.prototype.lineNumber- Line number in file that raised this error. Inherited from
Error. ReferenceError.prototype.columnNumber- Column number in line that raised this error. Inherited from
Error. ReferenceError.prototype.stack- Stack trace. Inherited from
Error.
Methods
Although the ReferenceError prototype object does not contain any methods of its own, ReferenceError instances do inherit some methods through the prototype chain.
Examples
Catching a ReferenceError
try {
var a = undefinedVariable;
} catch (e) {
console.log(e instanceof ReferenceError); // true
console.log(e.message); // "undefinedVariable is not defined"
console.log(e.name); // "ReferenceError"
console.log(e.fileName); // "Scratchpad/1"
console.log(e.lineNumber); // 2
console.log(e.columnNumber); // 6
console.log(e.stack); // "@Scratchpad/2:2:7\n"
}
Creating a ReferenceError
try {
throw new ReferenceError('Hello', 'someFile.js', 10);
} catch (e) {
console.log(e instanceof ReferenceError); // true
console.log(e.message); // "Hello"
console.log(e.name); // "ReferenceError"
console.log(e.fileName); // "someFile.js"
console.log(e.lineNumber); // 10
console.log(e.columnNumber); // 0
console.log(e.stack); // "@Scratchpad/2:2:9\n"
}
Specifications
| Specification | Status | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| ECMAScript 3rd Edition (ECMA-262) | Standard | Initial definition. |
| ECMAScript 5.1 (ECMA-262) The definition of 'ReferenceError' in that specification. |
Standard | |
| ECMAScript 2015 (6th Edition, ECMA-262) The definition of 'ReferenceError' in that specification. |
Standard | |
| ECMAScript Latest Draft (ECMA-262) The definition of 'ReferenceError' in that specification. |
Draft |
Browser compatibility
The compatibility table on this page is generated from structured data. If you'd like to contribute to the data, please check out https://github.com/mdn/browser-compat-data and send us a pull request.
Update compatibility data on GitHub
| Desktop | Mobile | Server | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ReferenceError | Chrome Full support 1 | Edge Full support 12 | Firefox Full support 1 | IE Full support 5.5 | Opera Full support Yes | Safari Full support Yes | WebView Android Full support 1 | Chrome Android Full support 18 | Firefox Android Full support 4 | Opera Android Full support Yes | Safari iOS Full support Yes | Samsung Internet Android Full support 1.0 | nodejs Full support Yes |
Legend
- Full support
- Full support