--- title: Console description: Get JavaScript logs in your native logs. --- |AppVeyor|Travis CI| |:-:|:-:| |[![Build status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/apache/cordova-plugin-console?branch=master)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/ApacheSoftwareFoundation/cordova-plugin-console)|[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/apache/cordova-plugin-console.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/apache/cordova-plugin-console)| # cordova-plugin-console ## Deprecated > This plugin is no longer being worked on as the functionality provided by this plugin is now included in cordova-ios 4.5.0 or greater, and support is already built in to cordova-windows > 5.0.0. You should upgrade your application to use version 2.0.0 of this plugin. It will detect whether or not the plugin is required based on the version of cordova-ios and cordova-windows your app uses. > Please file issues for this plugin against their respective platforms (cordova-ios, cordova-windows). ## Description This plugin is meant to ensure that console.log() is as useful as it can be. It adds additional function for iOS, Ubuntu, Windows Phone 8, and Windows. If you are happy with how console.log() works for you, then you probably don't need this plugin. This plugin defines a global `console` object. Although the object is in the global scope, features provided by this plugin are not available until after the `deviceready` event. document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false); function onDeviceReady() { console.log("console.log works well"); } :warning: Report issues on the [Apache Cordova issue tracker](https://issues.apache.org/jira/issues/?jql=project%20%3D%20CB%20AND%20status%20in%20%28Open%2C%20%22In%20Progress%22%2C%20Reopened%29%20AND%20resolution%20%3D%20Unresolved%20AND%20component%20%3D%20%22Plugin%20Console%22%20ORDER%20BY%20priority%20DESC%2C%20summary%20ASC%2C%20updatedDate%20DESC) ## Installation cordova plugin add cordova-plugin-console ### Android Quirks On some platforms other than Android, console.log() will act on multiple arguments, such as console.log("1", "2", "3"). However, Android will act only on the first argument. Subsequent arguments to console.log() will be ignored. This plugin is not the cause of that, it is a limitation of Android itself. ## Supported Methods The plugin support following methods of the `console` object: - `console.log` - `console.error` - `console.exception` - `console.warn` - `console.info` - `console.debug` - `console.assert` - `console.dir` - `console.dirxml` - `console.time` - `console.timeEnd` - `console.table` ## Partially supported Methods Methods of the `console` object which implemented, but behave different from browser implementation: - `console.group` - `console.groupCollapsed` The grouping methods are just log name of the group and don't actually indicate grouping for later calls to `console` object methods. ## Not supported Methods Methods of the `console` object which are implemented, but do nothing: - `console.clear` - `console.trace` - `console.groupEnd` - `console.timeStamp` - `console.profile` - `console.profileEnd` - `console.count` ## Supported formatting The following formatting options available: Format chars: * `%j` - format arg as JSON * `%o` - format arg as JSON * `%c` - format arg as `''`. No color formatting could be done. * `%%` - replace with `'%'` Any other char following `%` will format its arg via `toString()`.