The JavaScript warning "reference to undefined property" occurs when a script attempted to access an object property which doesn't exist.
The JavaScript warning "reference to undefined property" occurs when a script attempted to access an object property which doesn't exist.
ReferenceError: reference to undefined property "x" (Firefox)
(Firefox only) ReferenceError
warning which is reported only if javascript.options.strict
preference is set to true
.
The script attempted to access an object property which doesn't exist. There are two ways to access properties; see the property accessors reference page to learn more about them.
In this case, the property bar
is an undefined property, so a ReferenceError
will occur.
const foo = {}; foo.bar; // ReferenceError: reference to undefined property "bar"
To avoid the error, you need to either add a definition for bar
to the object or check for the existence of the bar
property before trying to access it; ways to do that include using the in
operator, or the Object.hasOwn()
method, like this:
const foo = {}; // Define the bar property foo.bar = "moon"; console.log(foo.bar); // "moon" // Test to be sure bar exists before accessing it if (Object.hasOwn(foo, "bar")) { console.log(foo.bar); }
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https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Errors/Undefined_prop