Claude-code-templates n8n-code-javascript
Write JavaScript code in n8n Code nodes. Use when writing JavaScript in n8n, using $input/$json/$node syntax, making HTTP requests with $helpers, working with dates using DateTime, troubleshooting Code node errors, or choosing between Code node modes.
git clone https://github.com/davila7/claude-code-templates
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/davila7/claude-code-templates "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/cli-tool/components/skills/workflow-automation/n8n/n8n-code-javascript" ~/.claude/skills/davila7-claude-code-templates-n8n-code-javascript && rm -rf "$T"
cli-tool/components/skills/workflow-automation/n8n/n8n-code-javascript/SKILL.mdJavaScript Code Node
Expert guidance for writing JavaScript code in n8n Code nodes.
Quick Start
// Basic template for Code nodes const items = $input.all(); // Process data const processed = items.map(item => ({ json: { ...item.json, processed: true, timestamp: new Date().toISOString() } })); return processed;
Essential Rules
- Choose "Run Once for All Items" mode (recommended for most use cases)
- Access data:
,$input.all()
, or$input.first()$input.item - CRITICAL: Must return
format[{json: {...}}] - CRITICAL: Webhook data is under
(not$json.body
directly)$json - Built-ins available: $helpers.httpRequest(), DateTime (Luxon), $jmespath()
Mode Selection Guide
The Code node offers two execution modes. Choose based on your use case:
Run Once for All Items (Recommended - Default)
Use this mode for: 95% of use cases
- How it works: Code executes once regardless of input count
- Data access:
or$input.all()
arrayitems - Best for: Aggregation, filtering, batch processing, transformations, API calls with all data
- Performance: Faster for multiple items (single execution)
// Example: Calculate total from all items const allItems = $input.all(); const total = allItems.reduce((sum, item) => sum + (item.json.amount || 0), 0); return [{ json: { total, count: allItems.length, average: total / allItems.length } }];
When to use:
- ✅ Comparing items across the dataset
- ✅ Calculating totals, averages, or statistics
- ✅ Sorting or ranking items
- ✅ Deduplication
- ✅ Building aggregated reports
- ✅ Combining data from multiple items
Run Once for Each Item
Use this mode for: Specialized cases only
- How it works: Code executes separately for each input item
- Data access:
or$input.item$item - Best for: Item-specific logic, independent operations, per-item validation
- Performance: Slower for large datasets (multiple executions)
// Example: Add processing timestamp to each item const item = $input.item; return [{ json: { ...item.json, processed: true, processedAt: new Date().toISOString() } }];
When to use:
- ✅ Each item needs independent API call
- ✅ Per-item validation with different error handling
- ✅ Item-specific transformations based on item properties
- ✅ When items must be processed separately for business logic
Decision Shortcut:
- Need to look at multiple items? → Use "All Items" mode
- Each item completely independent? → Use "Each Item" mode
- Not sure? → Use "All Items" mode (you can always loop inside)
Data Access Patterns
Pattern 1: $input.all() - Most Common
Use when: Processing arrays, batch operations, aggregations
// Get all items from previous node const allItems = $input.all(); // Filter, map, reduce as needed const valid = allItems.filter(item => item.json.status === 'active'); const mapped = valid.map(item => ({ json: { id: item.json.id, name: item.json.name } })); return mapped;
Pattern 2: $input.first() - Very Common
Use when: Working with single objects, API responses, first-in-first-out
// Get first item only const firstItem = $input.first(); const data = firstItem.json; return [{ json: { result: processData(data), processedAt: new Date().toISOString() } }];
Pattern 3: $input.item - Each Item Mode Only
Use when: In "Run Once for Each Item" mode
// Current item in loop (Each Item mode only) const currentItem = $input.item; return [{ json: { ...currentItem.json, itemProcessed: true } }];
Pattern 4: $node - Reference Other Nodes
Use when: Need data from specific nodes in workflow
// Get output from specific node const webhookData = $node["Webhook"].json; const httpData = $node["HTTP Request"].json; return [{ json: { combined: { webhook: webhookData, api: httpData } } }];
See: DATA_ACCESS.md for comprehensive guide
Critical: Webhook Data Structure
MOST COMMON MISTAKE: Webhook data is nested under
.body
// ❌ WRONG - Will return undefined const name = $json.name; const email = $json.email; // ✅ CORRECT - Webhook data is under .body const name = $json.body.name; const email = $json.body.email; // Or with $input const webhookData = $input.first().json.body; const name = webhookData.name;
Why: Webhook node wraps all request data under
body property. This includes POST data, query parameters, and JSON payloads.
See: DATA_ACCESS.md for full webhook structure details
Return Format Requirements
CRITICAL RULE: Always return array of objects with
json property
Correct Return Formats
// ✅ Single result return [{ json: { field1: value1, field2: value2 } }]; // ✅ Multiple results return [ {json: {id: 1, data: 'first'}}, {json: {id: 2, data: 'second'}} ]; // ✅ Transformed array const transformed = $input.all() .filter(item => item.json.valid) .map(item => ({ json: { id: item.json.id, processed: true } })); return transformed; // ✅ Empty result (when no data to return) return []; // ✅ Conditional return if (shouldProcess) { return [{json: processedData}]; } else { return []; }
Incorrect Return Formats
// ❌ WRONG: Object without array wrapper return { json: {field: value} }; // ❌ WRONG: Array without json wrapper return [{field: value}]; // ❌ WRONG: Plain string return "processed"; // ❌ WRONG: Raw data without mapping return $input.all(); // Missing .map() // ❌ WRONG: Incomplete structure return [{data: value}]; // Should be {json: value}
Why it matters: Next nodes expect array format. Incorrect format causes workflow execution to fail.
See: ERROR_PATTERNS.md #3 for detailed error solutions
Common Patterns Overview
Based on production workflows, here are the most useful patterns:
1. Multi-Source Data Aggregation
Combine data from multiple APIs, webhooks, or nodes
const allItems = $input.all(); const results = []; for (const item of allItems) { const sourceName = item.json.name || 'Unknown'; // Parse source-specific structure if (sourceName === 'API1' && item.json.data) { results.push({ json: { title: item.json.data.title, source: 'API1' } }); } } return results;
2. Filtering with Regex
Extract patterns, mentions, or keywords from text
const pattern = /\b([A-Z]{2,5})\b/g; const matches = {}; for (const item of $input.all()) { const text = item.json.text; const found = text.match(pattern); if (found) { found.forEach(match => { matches[match] = (matches[match] || 0) + 1; }); } } return [{json: {matches}}];
3. Data Transformation & Enrichment
Map fields, normalize formats, add computed fields
const items = $input.all(); return items.map(item => { const data = item.json; const nameParts = data.name.split(' '); return { json: { first_name: nameParts[0], last_name: nameParts.slice(1).join(' '), email: data.email, created_at: new Date().toISOString() } }; });
4. Top N Filtering & Ranking
Sort and limit results
const items = $input.all(); const topItems = items .sort((a, b) => (b.json.score || 0) - (a.json.score || 0)) .slice(0, 10); return topItems.map(item => ({json: item.json}));
5. Aggregation & Reporting
Sum, count, group data
const items = $input.all(); const total = items.reduce((sum, item) => sum + (item.json.amount || 0), 0); return [{ json: { total, count: items.length, average: total / items.length, timestamp: new Date().toISOString() } }];
See: COMMON_PATTERNS.md for 10 detailed production patterns
Error Prevention - Top 5 Mistakes
#1: Empty Code or Missing Return (Most Common)
// ❌ WRONG: No return statement const items = $input.all(); // ... processing code ... // Forgot to return! // ✅ CORRECT: Always return data const items = $input.all(); // ... processing ... return items.map(item => ({json: item.json}));
#2: Expression Syntax Confusion
// ❌ WRONG: Using n8n expression syntax in code const value = "{{ $json.field }}"; // ✅ CORRECT: Use JavaScript template literals const value = `${$json.field}`; // ✅ CORRECT: Direct access const value = $input.first().json.field;
#3: Incorrect Return Wrapper
// ❌ WRONG: Returning object instead of array return {json: {result: 'success'}}; // ✅ CORRECT: Array wrapper required return [{json: {result: 'success'}}];
#4: Missing Null Checks
// ❌ WRONG: Crashes if field doesn't exist const value = item.json.user.email; // ✅ CORRECT: Safe access with optional chaining const value = item.json?.user?.email || 'no-email@example.com'; // ✅ CORRECT: Guard clause if (!item.json.user) { return []; } const value = item.json.user.email;
#5: Webhook Body Nesting
// ❌ WRONG: Direct access to webhook data const email = $json.email; // ✅ CORRECT: Webhook data under .body const email = $json.body.email;
See: ERROR_PATTERNS.md for comprehensive error guide
Built-in Functions & Helpers
$helpers.httpRequest()
Make HTTP requests from within code:
const response = await $helpers.httpRequest({ method: 'GET', url: 'https://api.example.com/data', headers: { 'Authorization': 'Bearer token', 'Content-Type': 'application/json' } }); return [{json: {data: response}}];
DateTime (Luxon)
Date and time operations:
// Current time const now = DateTime.now(); // Format dates const formatted = now.toFormat('yyyy-MM-dd'); const iso = now.toISO(); // Date arithmetic const tomorrow = now.plus({days: 1}); const lastWeek = now.minus({weeks: 1}); return [{ json: { today: formatted, tomorrow: tomorrow.toFormat('yyyy-MM-dd') } }];
$jmespath()
Query JSON structures:
const data = $input.first().json; // Filter array const adults = $jmespath(data, 'users[?age >= `18`]'); // Extract fields const names = $jmespath(data, 'users[*].name'); return [{json: {adults, names}}];
See: BUILTIN_FUNCTIONS.md for complete reference
Best Practices
1. Always Validate Input Data
const items = $input.all(); // Check if data exists if (!items || items.length === 0) { return []; } // Validate structure if (!items[0].json) { return [{json: {error: 'Invalid input format'}}]; } // Continue processing...
2. Use Try-Catch for Error Handling
try { const response = await $helpers.httpRequest({ url: 'https://api.example.com/data' }); return [{json: {success: true, data: response}}]; } catch (error) { return [{ json: { success: false, error: error.message } }]; }
3. Prefer Array Methods Over Loops
// ✅ GOOD: Functional approach const processed = $input.all() .filter(item => item.json.valid) .map(item => ({json: {id: item.json.id}})); // ❌ SLOWER: Manual loop const processed = []; for (const item of $input.all()) { if (item.json.valid) { processed.push({json: {id: item.json.id}}); } }
4. Filter Early, Process Late
// ✅ GOOD: Filter first to reduce processing const processed = $input.all() .filter(item => item.json.status === 'active') // Reduce dataset first .map(item => expensiveTransformation(item)); // Then transform // ❌ WASTEFUL: Transform everything, then filter const processed = $input.all() .map(item => expensiveTransformation(item)) // Wastes CPU .filter(item => item.json.status === 'active');
5. Use Descriptive Variable Names
// ✅ GOOD: Clear intent const activeUsers = $input.all().filter(item => item.json.active); const totalRevenue = activeUsers.reduce((sum, user) => sum + user.json.revenue, 0); // ❌ BAD: Unclear purpose const a = $input.all().filter(item => item.json.active); const t = a.reduce((s, u) => s + u.json.revenue, 0);
6. Debug with console.log()
// Debug statements appear in browser console const items = $input.all(); console.log(`Processing ${items.length} items`); for (const item of items) { console.log('Item data:', item.json); // Process... } return result;
When to Use Code Node
Use Code node when:
- ✅ Complex transformations requiring multiple steps
- ✅ Custom calculations or business logic
- ✅ Recursive operations
- ✅ API response parsing with complex structure
- ✅ Multi-step conditionals
- ✅ Data aggregation across items
Consider other nodes when:
- ❌ Simple field mapping → Use Set node
- ❌ Basic filtering → Use Filter node
- ❌ Simple conditionals → Use IF or Switch node
- ❌ HTTP requests only → Use HTTP Request node
Code node excels at: Complex logic that would require chaining many simple nodes
Integration with Other Skills
Works With:
n8n Expression Syntax:
- Expressions use
syntax in other nodes{{ }} - Code nodes use JavaScript directly (no
){{ }} - When to use expressions vs code
n8n MCP Tools Expert:
- How to find Code node:
search_nodes({query: "code"}) - Get configuration help:
get_node_essentials("nodes-base.code") - Validate code:
validate_node_operation()
n8n Node Configuration:
- Mode selection (All Items vs Each Item)
- Language selection (JavaScript vs Python)
- Understanding property dependencies
n8n Workflow Patterns:
- Code nodes in transformation step
- Webhook → Code → API pattern
- Error handling in workflows
n8n Validation Expert:
- Validate Code node configuration
- Handle validation errors
- Auto-fix common issues
Quick Reference Checklist
Before deploying Code nodes, verify:
- Code is not empty - Must have meaningful logic
- Return statement exists - Must return array of objects
- Proper return format - Each item:
{json: {...}} - Data access correct - Using
,$input.all()
, or$input.first()$input.item - No n8n expressions - Use JavaScript template literals:
`${value}` - Error handling - Guard clauses for null/undefined inputs
- Webhook data - Access via
if from webhook.body - Mode selection - "All Items" for most cases
- Performance - Prefer map/filter over manual loops
- Output consistent - All code paths return same structure
Additional Resources
Related Files
- DATA_ACCESS.md - Comprehensive data access patterns
- COMMON_PATTERNS.md - 10 production-tested patterns
- ERROR_PATTERNS.md - Top 5 errors and solutions
- BUILTIN_FUNCTIONS.md - Complete built-in reference
n8n Documentation
- Code Node Guide: https://docs.n8n.io/code/code-node/
- Built-in Methods: https://docs.n8n.io/code-examples/methods-variables-reference/
- Luxon Documentation: https://moment.github.io/luxon/
Ready to write JavaScript in n8n Code nodes! Start with simple transformations, use the error patterns guide to avoid common mistakes, and reference the pattern library for production-ready examples.