The index()
method of the IDBObjectStore
interface opens a named index in the current object store, after which it can be used to, for example, return a series of records sorted by that index using a cursor.
An IDBIndex
object for accessing the index.
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.
Finally, we iterate through each record, and insert the data into an HTML table. For a complete working example, see our IDBIndex example in IndexedDB-examples demo repo (View the example live.)
function displayDataByIndex() {
tableEntry.innerHTML = "";
const transaction = db.transaction(["contactsList"], "readonly");
const objectStore = transaction.objectStore("contactsList");
const myIndex = objectStore.index("lName");
myIndex.openCursor().onsuccess = (event) => {
const cursor = event.target.result;
if (cursor) {
const tableRow = document.createElement("tr");
tableRow.innerHTML =
`<td>${cursor.value.id}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.lName}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.fName}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.jTitle}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.company}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.eMail}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.phone}</td>` +
`<td>${cursor.value.age}</td>`;
tableEntry.appendChild(tableRow);
cursor.continue();
} else {
console.log("Entries all displayed.");
}
};
}