# stackback Returns an array of CallSite objects for a captured stacktrace. Useful if you want to access the frame for an error object. ## use ```javascript var stackback = require('stackback'); // error generated from somewhere var err = new Error('some sample error'); // stack is an array of CallSite objects var stack = stackback(err); ``` ## CallSite object From the [V8 StackTrace API](https://code.google.com/p/v8/wiki/JavaScriptStackTraceApi) The structured stack trace is an Array of CallSite objects, each of which represents a stack frame. A CallSite object defines the following methods getThis: returns the value of this getTypeName: returns the type of this as a string. This is the name of the function stored in the constructor field of this, if available, otherwise the object's [[Class]] internal property. getFunction: returns the current function getFunctionName: returns the name of the current function, typically its name property. If a name property is not available an attempt will be made to try to infer a name from the function's context. getMethodName: returns the name of the property of this or one of its prototypes that holds the current function getFileName: if this function was defined in a script returns the name of the script getLineNumber: if this function was defined in a script returns the current line number getColumnNumber: if this function was defined in a script returns the current column number getEvalOrigin: if this function was created using a call to eval returns a CallSite object representing the location where eval was called isToplevel: is this a toplevel invocation, that is, is this the global object? isEval: does this call take place in code defined by a call to eval? isNative: is this call in native V8 code? isConstructor: is this a constructor call? ## install ```shell npm install stackback ```