Error.isError()
Limited availability
This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.
The Error.isError() static method determines whether the passed value is an Error.
Syntax
Error.isError(value)
Parameters
value-
The value to be checked.
Return value
true if value is an Error; otherwise, false.
Description
Error.isError() checks if the passed value is an Error. It does so by performing a branded check for a private field initialized by the Error() constructor.
This is the same mechanism used by Array.isArray(), which is in turn similar to the mechanism used by the in operator.
It is a more robust alternative to instanceof Error because it avoids false positives and false negatives:
Error.isError()rejects values that aren't actualErrorinstances, even if they haveError.prototypein their prototype chain —instanceof Errorwould accept these as it does check the prototype chain.Error.isError()acceptsErrorobjects constructed in another realm —instanceof Errorreturnsfalsefor these because the identity of theErrorconstructor is different across realms.
Error.isError() returns true for DOMException instances. This is because, although DOMException is not specified as a real subclass of Error (the Error constructor is not the prototype of the DOMException constructor), DOMException still behaves like Error for all branded checking purposes.
Examples
>Using Error.isError()
// all following calls return true
Error.isError(new Error());
Error.isError(new TypeError());
Error.isError(new DOMException());
try {
1 + 1n;
} catch (e) {
console.log(Error.isError(e)); // The operation threw a TypeError, so this returns true
}
// all following calls return false
Error.isError();
Error.isError({});
Error.isError(null);
Error.isError(undefined);
Error.isError(17);
Error.isError("Error");
Error.isError(true);
Error.isError(false);
// This is not an error, because the object does not have the private field
// initialized by the Error constructor
Error.isError({ __proto__: Error.prototype });
instanceof vs. Error.isError()
When checking for Error instance, Error.isError() is preferred over instanceof because it works across realms.
const iframe = document.createElement("iframe");
document.body.appendChild(iframe);
const xError = window.frames[window.frames.length - 1].Error;
const error = new xError();
// Correctly checking for Error
Error.isError(error); // true
// The prototype of error is xError.prototype, which is a
// different object from Error.prototype
error instanceof Error; // false
Normalizing caught errors
You can use Error.isError() to detect if the caught value is an error and normalize it to an error object.
try {
throw "Oops; this is not an Error object";
} catch (e) {
if (!Error.isError(e)) {
e = new Error(e);
}
console.error(e.message);
}
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-error.iserror> |
Browser compatibility
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