Test if an object is defined in ActionScript
Asked Answered
W

4

28

In ActionScript, how can you test if an object is defined, that is, not null?

Wellstacked answered 17/11, 2008 at 20:48 Comment(1)
Does this work exactly the same in AS1, AS2 and AS3?Carmon
Z
34

test if an object is defined

This works in AS2 and AS3, and is the most reliable way to test if an object has a value.

if (obj != null) {
    doSomethingWith(obj);
}

Its also the most reliable way to test an object's property and read it in the same expression:

if (arr[0] != null && arr[0]>5) {
    doSomethingWith(arr[0]);
}

test if an object is null

There's a difference between null and undefined, but if you don't care you can just do a normal comparison between either one because they compare equal:

if (obj == null) {
    doSomethingWith(obj);
}

is the same as

if (obj == undefined) {
    doSomethingWith(obj);
}

If you care about the difference, use the === or !== operator, which won't convert them.

if (obj === undefined) {
    // obj was never assigned a value
}
else if (obj === null) {
    // obj was explicitly set to null
}
else {
    doSomethingWith(obj);
}
Zetland answered 17/11, 2008 at 21:6 Comment(6)
You mean all those if(obj == null || obj == undefined) statements in my codebase can be condensed? woo! :)Earth
Could you throw "if (obj)" in there? How does boolean coercion work?Carmon
This is probably dead but got to this page googling for actionscript checing null. I have an mx:html control and on the htmlDOMInitialize I take the document like so: doc:Object = myMxHTML.domWindow.document; Then doc.head==null evaluates to false even though trace(doc.head) shows null. doc is not null, as in the documentation it can't be.Jahdai
@Jahdai You might want to ask that as a new question about your specific situation. It sounds like there's something unusual going on, but I don't know enough about ActionScript to know what it is.Zetland
Hi Matthew, I don't know what is supposed to happen either. Just this page turns up nr2 when searching for checking null so I wanted to make sure this is still current. Didn't do much testing but tracing notNullVar.nullOrNotExisting gave me null where notNullVar.nullOrNotExisting==null equals false. Could ask a new question but I bet a lot of people would end up here when googling for this and might be disappointed if the answers here won't work.Jahdai
@Jahdai As far as I know, it's still current. It is for ECMAScript at least (but I don't know how closely ActionScript follows the spec). Host objects (like the DOM) are not specified by the language though, so they can generally behave however they want, which might explain the inconsistency you're seeing.Zetland
C
8

For ActionScript 3.0, if all you want is a generic test for nothingness, then it's very easy:

var a;
var b;
var c;
var d;
a = undefined;
b = null;
c = 5;
if (a) 
    trace(a);
if (b) 
    trace(b);
if (c) // Will trace
    trace(c); 
if (d) 
    trace(d);

In the example above, only c will trace. This is usually what I need, and just checking if (obj) is the most readable version.

This method uses implicit conversion to a boolean value, also known as boolean coercion, and the details of what values will coerce to false and what values will coerce to true follow ECMA standards and are also documented specifically for ActionScript.

Carmon answered 22/2, 2009 at 11:51 Comment(5)
I thought I would have tried that, but this indeed works, and I think it looks nice too.Wellstacked
I like it too, it makes the code more readable and makes refactoring easier.Carmon
Note, e = 0; if (e) trace(e);Dip
Eeek! This code can be so much cleaner! var a = undefined, b = null, c = 5, d;Pub
@TheWobbuffet Why stop there? The code can be cleaned up to only consist of trace(5). But that, as well as your suggestion, would defeat the purpose of the code, which was to illustrate as clearly as possible how boolean coercion works. :)Carmon
E
3

Just test it against null.

var someObj:Object = getSomeObjectOrMaybeNull();
if(someObj == null) {
  trace("someObj is null!");
} else {
  trace("someObj is not null!");
}
Earth answered 17/11, 2008 at 20:50 Comment(0)
D
-2

You could also loop through a parent object to see if it contains any instances of the object you're looking for.

foundit=false;
for (var i in this) {
    if (this[i]._name == "MyMovie") {
         foundit=true;
    }
}
Dissimilitude answered 4/1, 2009 at 10:1 Comment(1)
This is very bad practice to loop just to find out if some object is nullHumpbacked

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