<script type="module" id="user-code">
try {
someUnknownReference;
} catch (error) {
console.log(error) // correct
console.log(error.toString()); // incorrect
console.log(error.stack.toString().split('\n')); // incorrect - line number and filename is wrong
}
//# sourceMappingURL=data:application/json;charset=utf-8;base64,eyJ2ZXJzaW9uIjozLCJzb3VyY2VzIjpbImluZGV4LmpzIl0sIm5hbWVzIjpbImxrc2xrcyJdLCJtYXBwaW5ncyI6IkFBQUFBLE1BQU0iLCJmaWxlIjoiYnVuZGxlLmpzIiwic291cmNlc0NvbnRlbnQiOlsibGtzbGtzIl19
</script>
I'm building a browser based code editor using Babel. All is working well, however I can't for the life of me extract the line number and file name out of the errors that happen during run time.
The example above is a simplified version of what I'm doing. I'm injecting a string into a script tag e.g scriptTag.innerHTML = bundledCode;
The first console.log prints exactly what I want to parse e.g it has the file name and correct line number which it gets from the sourcemap
ReferenceError: someUnknownReference is not defined
at index.js:1
However, as soon as I try to do anything with the error e.g the second console.log, I lose the line number and file name.
ReferenceError: someUnknownReference is not defined
My guess is maybe it's losing the reference to the sourcemap when we try to parse the object?
Thanks in advance for any help!
I think Chrome console is automatically consuming source maps to provide the correct error msg if you're console logging the error. Not if you're grabbing the actual string. Do you need something like this: https://www.npmjs.com/package/sourcemapped-stacktrace?
I am running an AJAX call in my MooTools script, this works fine in Firefox but in Chrome I am getting a Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token : error, I cannot determine why. Commenting out code to determine where the bad code is yields nothing, I am thinking it may be a problem with the JSON being returned. Checking in the console I see the JSON returned is this:
{"votes":47,"totalvotes":90}
I don't see any problems with it, why would this error occur?
vote.each(function(e){
e.set('send', {
onRequest : function(){
spinner.show();
},
onComplete : function(){
spinner.hide();
},
onSuccess : function(resp){
var j = JSON.decode(resp);
if (!j) return false;
var restaurant = e.getParent('.restaurant');
restaurant.getElements('.votes')[0].set('html', j.votes + " vote(s)");
$$('#restaurants .restaurant').pop().set('html', "Total Votes: " + j.totalvotes);
buildRestaurantGraphs();
}
});
e.addEvent('submit', function(e){
e.stop();
this.send();
});
});
Seeing red errors
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token <
in your Chrome developer's console tab is an indication of HTML in the response body.
What you're actually seeing is your browser's reaction to the unexpected top line <!DOCTYPE html> from the server.
Just an FYI for people who might have the same problem -- I just had to make my server send back the JSON as application/json and the default jQuery handler worked fine.
This has just happened to me, and the reason was none of the reasons above. I was using the jQuery command getJSON and adding callback=? to use JSONP (as I needed to go cross-domain), and returning the JSON code {"foo":"bar"} and getting the error.
This is because I should have included the callback data, something like jQuery17209314005577471107_1335958194322({"foo":"bar"})
Here is the PHP code I used to achieve this, which degrades if JSON (without a callback) is used:
$ret['foo'] = "bar";
finish();
function finish() {
header("content-type:application/json");
if ($_GET['callback']) {
print $_GET['callback']."(";
}
print json_encode($GLOBALS['ret']);
if ($_GET['callback']) {
print ")";
}
exit;
}
Hopefully that will help someone in the future.
I have just solved the problem. There was something causing problems with a standard Request call, so this is the code I used instead:
vote.each(function(element){
element.addEvent('submit', function(e){
e.stop();
new Request.JSON({
url : e.target.action,
onRequest : function(){
spinner.show();
},
onComplete : function(){
spinner.hide();
},
onSuccess : function(resp){
var j = resp;
if (!j) return false;
var restaurant = element.getParent('.restaurant');
restaurant.getElements('.votes')[0].set('html', j.votes + " vote(s)");
$$('#restaurants .restaurant').pop().set('html', "Total Votes: " + j.totalvotes);
buildRestaurantGraphs();
}
}).send(this);
});
});
If anyone knows why the standard Request object was giving me problems I would love to know.
I thought I'd add my issue and resolution to the list.
I was getting: Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token < and the error was pointing to this line in my ajax success statement:
var total = $.parseJSON(response);
I later found that in addition to the json results, there was HTML being sent with the response because I had an error in my PHP. When you get an error in PHP you can set it to warn you with huge orange tables and those tables were what was throwing off the JSON.
I found that out by just doing a console.log(response) in order to see what was actually being sent. If it's an issue with the JSON data, just try to see if you can do a console.log or some other statement that will allow you to see what is sent and what is received.
When you request your JSON file, server returns JavaScript Content-Type header (text/javascript) instead of JSON (application/json).
According to MooTools docs:
Responses with javascript content-type will be evaluated automatically.
In result MooTools tries to evaluate your JSON as JavaScript, and when you try to evaluate such JSON:
{"votes":47,"totalvotes":90}
as JavaScript, parser treats { and } as a block scope instead of object notation. It is the same as evaluating following "code":
"votes":47,"totalvotes":90
As you can see, : is totally unexpected there.
The solution is to set correct Content-Type header for the JSON file. If you save it with .json extension, your server should do it by itself.
It sounds like your response is being evaluated somehow. This gives the same error in Chrome:
var resp = '{"votes":47,"totalvotes":90}';
eval(resp);
This is due to the braces '{...}' being interpreted by javascript as a code block and not an object literal as one might expect.
I would look at the JSON.decode() function and see if there is an eval in there.
Similar issue here:
Eval() = Unexpected token : error
This happened to me today as well. I was using EF and returning an Entity in response to an AJAX call. The virtual properties on my entity was causing a cyclical dependency error that was not being detected on the server. By adding the [ScriptIgnore] attribute on the virtual properties, the problem was fixed.
Instead of using the ScriptIgnore attribute, it would probably be better to just return a DTO.
If nothing makes sense, this error can also be caused by PHP Error that is embedded inside html/javascript, such as the one below
<br />
<b>Deprecated</b>: mysql_connect(): The mysql extension is deprecated and will be removed in the future: use mysqli or PDO instead in <b>C:\Projects\rwp\demo\en\super\ge.php</b> on line <b>54</b><br />
var zNodes =[{ id:1, pId:0, name:"ACE", url: "/ace1.php", target:"_self", open:true}
Not the <br /> etc in the code that are inserted into html by PHP is causing the error. To fix this kind of error (suppress warning), used this code in the start
error_reporting(E_ERROR | E_PARSE);
To view, right click on page, "view source" and then examine complete html to spot this error.
"Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token" error appearance when your data return wrong json format, in some case, you don't know you got wrong json format.
please check it with alert(); function
onSuccess : function(resp){
alert(resp);
}
your message received should be: {"firstName":"John", "lastName":"Doe"}
and then you can use code below
onSuccess : function(resp){
var j = JSON.decode(resp); // but in my case i'm using: JSON.parse(resp);
}
with out error "Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token"
but if you get wrong json format
ex:
...{"firstName":"John", "lastName":"Doe"}
or
Undefined variable: errCapt in .... on line<b>65</b><br/>{"firstName":"John", "lastName":"Doe"}
so that you got wrong json format, please fix it before you JSON.decode or JSON.parse
This happened to because I have a rule setup in my express server to route any 404 back to /# plus whatever the original request was. Allowing the angular router/js to handle the request. If there's no js route to handle that path, a request to /#/whatever is made to the server, which is just a request for /, the entire webpage.
So for example if I wanted to make a request for /correct/somejsfile.js but I miss typed it to /wrong/somejsfile.js the request is made to the server. That location/file does not exist, so the server responds with a 302 location: /#/wrong/somejsfile.js. The browser happily follows the redirect and the entire webpage is returned. The browser parses the page as js and you get
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token <
So to help find the offending path/request look for 302 requests.
Hope that helps someone.
I had the same problem and it turned out that the Json returned from the server
wasn't valid Json-P. If you don't use the call as a crossdomain call use regular Json.
My mistake was forgetting single/double quotation around url in javascript:
so wrong code was:
window.location = https://google.com;
and correct code:
window.location = "https://google.com";
In my case putting / at the beginning of the src of scripts or href of stylesheets solved the issue.
I got this error because I was missing the type attribute in script tag.
Initially I was using but when I added the type attribute inside the script tag then my issue is resolved
I got a "SyntaxError: Unexpected token I" when I used jQuery.getJSON() to try to de-serialize a floating point value of Infinity, encoded as INF, which is illegal in JSON.
In my case i ran into the same error, while running spring mvc application due to wrong mapping in my mvc controller
#RequestMapping(name="/private/updatestatus")
i changed the above mapping to
#RequestMapping("/private/updatestatus")
or
#RequestMapping(value="/private/updatestatus",method = RequestMethod.GET)
For me the light bulb went on when I viewed the source to the page inside the Chrome browser. I had an extra bracket in an if statement. You'll immediately see the red circle with a cross in it on the failing line. It's a rather unhelpful error message, because the the Uncaught Syntax Error: Unexpected token makes no reference to a line number when it first appears in the console of Chrome.
I did Wrong in this
`var fs = require('fs');
var fs.writeFileSync(file, configJSON);`
Already I intialized the fs variable.But again i put var in the second line.This one also gives that kind of error...
For those experiencing this in AngularJs 1.4.6 or similar, my problem was with angular not finding my template because the file at the templateUrl (path) I provided couldn't be found. I just had to provide a reachable path and the problem went away.
In my case it was a mistaken url (not existing), so maybe your 'send' in second line should be other...
This error might also mean a missing colon or : in your code.
Facing JS issues repetitively I am working on a Ckeditor apply on my xblock package. please suggest to me if anyone helping me out. Using OpenEdx, Javascript, xblock
xblock.js:158 SyntaxError: Unexpected token '=>'
at eval (<anonymous>)
at Function.globalEval (jquery.js:343)
at domManip (jquery.js:5291)
at jQuery.fn.init.append (jquery.js:5431)
at child.loadResource (xblock.js:236)
at applyResource (xblock.js:199)
at Object.<anonymous> (xblock.js:202)
at fire (jquery.js:3187)
at Object.add [as done] (jquery.js:3246)
at applyResource (xblock.js:201) "SyntaxError: Unexpected token '=>'\n at eval (<anonymous>)\n at Function.globalEval (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/common/js/vendor/jquery.js:343:5)\n at domManip (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/common/js/vendor/jquery.js:5291:15)\n at jQuery.fn.init.append (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/common/js/vendor/jquery.js:5431:10)\n at child.loadResource (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/bundles/commons.js:5091:27)\n at applyResource (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/bundles/commons.js:5054:36)\n at Object.<anonymous> (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/bundles/commons.js:5057:25)\n at fire (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/common/js/vendor/jquery.js:3187:31)\n at Object.add [as done] (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/common/js/vendor/jquery.js:3246:7)\n at applyResource (http://localhost:18010/static/studio/bundles/commons.js:5056:29)"
Late to the party but my solution was to specify the dataType as json. Alternatively make sure you do not set jsonp: true.
Try this to ignore this issue:
Cypress.on('uncaught:exception', (err, runnable) => {
return false;
});
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token }
Chrome gaved me the error for this sample code:
<div class="file-square" onclick="window.location = " ?dir=zzz">
<div class="square-icon"></div>
<div class="square-text">zzz</div>
</div>
and solved it fixing the onclick to be like
... onclick="window.location = '?dir=zzz'" ...
But the error has nothing to do with the problem..
I am returning a string from my server to my client and jQuery throws me the following error.
JQUERY: Uncaught Error: Syntax error, unrecognized expression
Returned String is "D:/Upload/abcd#xyz.com/tracks/b8d8c86c40ee402899af1a999bbb55b1.mp3"
I am not able to figure out whats wrong with this string.
Pointers required. Thanks in advance.
Using JQuery version 1.11.1.
Apologies for that. Below is my jQueryCode. I am able to fetch the value for uploadedTrackId but it throws me an error at the next line. It does return me the path value but somehow jQuery is not able to parse it.
success: function (data,status) {
if(data['Success']!=null){
$('#progress-bar').load(document.URL + ' #progress-bar');
$('#progress-percent').css('color',"graytext");
$('#progress-percent').html(data['Success']);
//These are the global variables containing id/path for the recently uploaded track.
uploadedTrackId = $(data['id']);
uploadedTrackPath = $(data['path']);
You appear the be using the results as jQuery selectors. Just use them as is.
uploadedTrackId = data['id'];
uploadedTrackPath = data['path'];
You do not show the Ajax call, but data is probably already just an object with various properties. You should be able to also do the following:
uploadedTrackId = data.id;
uploadedTrackPath = data.path;
I am having trouble getting the Papa error object into my error handler. My parse suddenly stopped working and I just want to work out why / what changed! I use the following code to parse it:
Papa.parse(path, {download: true, header: true, complete: ListifyCSVData, error: CSVParseError});
My CSVParseError function gets called. But the error object is undefined:
CSVParseError = function(err, file){
alert("Unable to process CSV file, please verify the file can be accessed and try again. Error reason was: " + err.code);
}
Does anyone have any tips for what might be wrong here please?
Thank you for your help.
Glen
It could be that there is a bug in the library, although I'm only guessing at this point.
Can you open an issue on GitHub and also show the exact error message you're getting? If it's a bug in Papa Parse we definitely want to fix it.