IDBIndex: get() method
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
The get() method of the IDBIndex
interface returns an IDBRequest object, and, in a separate thread,
finds either the value in the referenced object store that corresponds to the given
key or the first corresponding value, if key is set to an
IDBKeyRange.
If a value is found, then a structured clone of it is created and set as the
result of the request object: this returns the record the key is associated
with.
Syntax
get()
get(key)
Parameters
keyOptional-
A key or
IDBKeyRangethat identifies the record to be retrieved. If this value is null or missing, the browser will use an unbound key range.
Return value
An IDBRequest object on which subsequent events related to this operation are fired.
If the operation is successful, the value of the request's result property is the value of the first record matching the given key or key range.
Exceptions
This method may raise a DOMException of one of the following types:
TransactionInactiveErrorDOMException-
Thrown if this
IDBIndex's transaction is inactive. DataErrorDOMException-
Thrown if the key or key range provided contains an invalid key.
InvalidStateErrorDOMException-
Thrown if the
IDBIndexhas been deleted or removed.
Examples
In the following example we open a transaction and an object store, then get the
index lName from a simple contacts database. We then open a basic cursor on
the index using IDBIndex.openCursor — this works the same as opening a
cursor directly on an ObjectStore using
IDBObjectStore.openCursor except that the returned records are sorted
based on the index, not the primary key.
myIndex.get('Bungle') is then used to retrieve the record with an
lName of Bungle, and the result of that request is logged to
the console when its success callback returns.
Finally, we iterate through each record, and insert the data into an HTML table. For a complete working example, see our IndexedDB-examples demo repo (View the example live).
function displayDataByIndex() {
tableEntry.textContent = "";
const transaction = db.transaction(["contactsList"], "readonly");
const objectStore = transaction.objectStore("contactsList");
const myIndex = objectStore.index("lName");
const getRequest = myIndex.get("Bungle");
getRequest.onsuccess = () => {
console.log(getRequest.result);
};
myIndex.openCursor().onsuccess = (event) => {
const cursor = event.target.result;
if (cursor) {
const tableRow = document.createElement("tr");
for (const cell of [
cursor.value.id,
cursor.value.lName,
cursor.value.fName,
cursor.value.jTitle,
cursor.value.company,
cursor.value.eMail,
cursor.value.phone,
cursor.value.age,
]) {
const tableCell = document.createElement("td");
tableCell.textContent = cell;
tableRow.appendChild(tableCell);
}
tableEntry.appendChild(tableRow);
cursor.continue();
} else {
console.log("Entries all displayed.");
}
};
}
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| Indexed Database API 3.0> # ref-for-dom-idbindex-get①> |
Browser compatibility
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See also
- Using IndexedDB
- Starting transactions:
IDBDatabase - Using transactions:
IDBTransaction - Setting a range of keys:
IDBKeyRange - Retrieving and making changes to your data:
IDBObjectStore - Using cursors:
IDBCursor - Reference example: To-do Notifications (View the example live).