Chrome 24 has a new way of outputting objects in console.log().
For example, console.log($("p")); on this jsFiddle example outputs this insanity:
▼[<p>, <p>, <p>, prevObject: jQuery.fn.jQuery.init[1], context: #document, selector: "p"]
► 0: <p>
► 1: <p>
► 2: <p>
► context: #document
length: 3
► prevObject: jQuery.fn.jQuery.init[1]
selector: "p"
► __proto__: Object[0]
I can see that it puts the collection of DOM elements at the beginning. But if you try to expand even a simple <p> tag that is mostly empty, it throws up all over you:
▼ 0: <p>
accessKey: ""
align: ""
► attributes: NamedNodeMap
...
[stopping here for sanity's sake]
So how do I use all this information? My first instinct is to tame it down to how it used to look, but on second thought, there really is a lot of info in there that I might want to have access to. But I'm having a hard time understanding what I'm looking at. Much of it looks like jQuery values. Is this a list of every jQuery value that the object has (or doesn't have)?
Then there's the whole issue of the ► context: thing and the ► __proto__: thing. Once you start drilling down in __proto__ you will never stop. I think it goes infinitely down!
How can I begin to learn how to use this new output?
EDIT: I actually just realized that I'm still using Chrome 23, this isn't something that was introduced in 24. Someone in this thread said it was a Chrome 24 issue, but maybe it's new in 23? At any rate, I only just recently started noticing this on jQuery objects.
EDIT 2: If you're just looking for how to log the old way, try this: (hat tip)
console.log.apply(console, $("div"));
console.log($("p"))for you? Are you happy with Firebug-style output (e.g.[p, p#bar, p.foo]) or Opera Dragonfly’s one (e.g.Object [+<p>, +<p id="bar">, +<p class="foo">])? I’m working on similar issue, I think I can improve output of jQuery objects as well. – NVI Nov 23 '12 at 12:05id=heyphysically in the tag, then it would show up, but if it doesn't, I don't getid: ""as well as every other theoretically possible attribute that isn't actually present. But that's just what I'm used to and found very useful. I'd still like to be able to do that, but I'm hoping to learn how to use this too. – brentonstrine Nov 26 '12 at 20:14