The JavaScript exception "right-hand side of 'in' should be an object" occurs when the in
operator was used to search in strings, or in numbers, or other primitive types. It can only be used to check if a property is in an object.
The JavaScript exception "right-hand side of 'in' should be an object" occurs when the in
operator was used to search in strings, or in numbers, or other primitive types. It can only be used to check if a property is in an object.
TypeError: Cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'x' in 'y' (V8-based & Firefox) TypeError: right-hand side of 'in' should be an object, got null (Firefox) TypeError: "y" is not an Object. (evaluating '"x" in "y"') (Safari)
The in
operator can only be used to check if a property is in an object. You can't search in strings, or in numbers, or other primitive types.
Unlike in other programming languages (e.g. Python), you can't search in strings using the in
operator.
"Hello" in "Hello World"; // TypeError: cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'Hello' in 'Hello World'
Instead you will need to use String.prototype.includes()
, for example.
"Hello World".includes("Hello"); // true
Make sure the object you are inspecting isn't actually null
or undefined
.
const foo = null; "bar" in foo; // TypeError: cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'bar' in 'foo' (Chrome) // TypeError: right-hand side of 'in' should be an object, got null (Firefox)
The in
operator always expects an object.
const foo = { baz: "bar" }; "bar" in foo; // false "PI" in Math; // true "pi" in Math; // false
Be careful when using the in
operator to search in Array
objects. The in
operator checks the index number, not the value at that index.
const trees = ["redwood", "bay", "cedar", "oak", "maple"]; 3 in trees; // true "oak" in trees; // false
© 2005–2023 MDN contributors.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Errors/in_operator_no_object