Our volunteers haven't translated this article into suomi yet. Join us and help get the job done!
The Storage
interface of the Web Storage API provides access to the session storage or local storage for a particular domain, allowing you to for example add, modify or delete stored data items.
If you want to manipulate the session storage for a domain, you call Window.sessionStorage
method; If you want to manipulate the local storage for a domain, you call Window.localStorage
.
Properties
Storage.length
Read only- Returns an integer representing the number of data items stored in the
Storage
object.
Methods
Storage.key()
- When passed a number n, this method will return the name of the nth key in the storage.
Storage.getItem()
- When passed a key name, will return that key's value.
Storage.setItem()
- When passed a key name and value, will add that key to the storage, or update that key's value if it already exists.
Storage.removeItem()
- When passed a key name, will remove that key from the storage.
Storage.clear()
- When invoked, will empty all keys out of the storage.
Examples
Here we access a Storage
object by calling localStorage
. We first test whether the local storage contains data items using !localStorage.getItem('bgcolor')
. If it does, we run a function called setStyles()
that grabs the data items using localStorage.getItem()
and uses those values to update page styles. If it doesn't, we run another function, populateStorage()
, which uses localStorage.setItem()
to set the item values, then runs setStyles()
.
if(!localStorage.getItem('bgcolor')) { populateStorage(); } else { setStyles(); } function populateStorage() { localStorage.setItem('bgcolor', document.getElementById('bgcolor').value); localStorage.setItem('font', document.getElementById('font').value); localStorage.setItem('image', document.getElementById('image').value); setStyles(); } function setStyles() { var currentColor = localStorage.getItem('bgcolor'); var currentFont = localStorage.getItem('font'); var currentImage = localStorage.getItem('image'); document.getElementById('bgcolor').value = currentColor; document.getElementById('font').value = currentFont; document.getElementById('image').value = currentImage; htmlElem.style.backgroundColor = '#' + currentColor; pElem.style.fontFamily = currentFont; imgElem.setAttribute('src', currentImage); }
Note: To see this running as a complete working example, see our Web Storage Demo.
Specifications
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
Web Storage (Second edition) The definition of 'Storage' in that specification. |
Recommendation |
Browser compatibility
Feature | Chrome | Firefox (Gecko) | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari (WebKit) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
localStorage | 4 | 3.5 | 8 | 10.50 | 4 |
sessionStorage | 5 | 2 | 8 | 10.50 | 4 |
Feature | Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | IE Phone | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | 2.1 | ? | 8 | 11 | 3.2[1] |
[1] Since iOS 5.1, Safari Mobile stores localStorage
data in the cache folder, which is subject to occasional clean up at the behest of the OS, typically if space is short.
All browsers have varying capacity levels for both localStorage and sessionStorage. Here is a detailed rundown of all the storage capacities for various browsers.