However, they don't cover the edge case where some key might not contain an Array.
This presupposes that that actually counts as an "edge case". One may ask what the result should be in that case, and one may answer (for example) that the case will be explicitly checked for in advance, or cannot arise by previous construction of the code.
In general, input specifications should show enough examples, and have enough detail in those examples, to make it clear what the code should do for every valid input. The text of the question, meanwhile, should define valid input.
It is perfectly reasonable to restrict the question to considering objects where every key is known to hold an array, given that the problem statement is naturally phrased in terms of comparing array lengths. The question should state such a restriction implicitly.
If you think a problem is underspecified within its explicit restrictions, then implicitly you think the question is unclear. So do the usual things: consider any combination of downvoting, voting or flagging to close as needing details or clarity, and commenting to explain the specific issue. That is: propose an example input in the comments where you can't discern what OP thinks the output should be, and ask about the desired output and reasoning behind it.
Similarly if the explicitly stated, desired output seems strange or wrong: comment to say that, according to your understanding of the rest of the question, you think the output for X should be Z (rather than OP's stated Y), and ask why that is wrong.
What if x doesnt contain value y
. I'm guessing from your comment you mean only the immediate problem as stated.