console: count() method

The console.count() method logs the number of times that this particular call to count() has been called.

Note: This feature is available in Web Workers

Syntax

js

count()
count(label)

Parameters

label Optional

A string. If supplied, count() outputs the number of times it has been called with that label. If omitted, count() behaves as though it was called with the "default" label.

Return value

None (undefined).

Examples

For example, given code like this:

js

let user = "";

function greet() {
  console.count();
  return `hi ${user}`;
}

user = "bob";
greet();
user = "alice";
greet();
greet();
console.count();

Console output will look something like this:

"default: 1"
"default: 2"
"default: 3"
"default: 4"

The label is displayed as default because no explicit label was supplied.

If we pass the user variable as the label argument to the first invocation of count(), and the string "alice" to the second:

js

let user = "";

function greet() {
  console.count(user);
  return `hi ${user}`;
}

user = "bob";
greet();
user = "alice";
greet();
greet();
console.count("alice");

We will see output like this:

"bob: 1"
"alice: 1"
"alice: 2"
"alice: 3"

We're now maintaining separate counts based only on the value of label.

Specifications

Specification
Console Standard
# count

Browser compatibility

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