5

Tl;Dr: In the last few days three community members are working around the tag wiki of . The goal is to have a "FAQ". This question is specific to make a FAQ about few TypeError messages in :

TypeError: Cannot call method ... of null
TypeError: Cannot read property ... of null
TypeError: Cannot set properties ... of null

  • [google-apps-script] title:typeerror cannot "of null"returns 59 results
  • [google-apps-script] -title:typeerror is:question cannot "of null" returns 226 results
  • [google-apps-script] "TypeError: Cannot" is:question 887 results

Please propose the initial content for a Q/A about these errors as an answer to this question. If you want to make more than one proposal, i.e. proposing to review two or more existing questions, use one answer for each proposal.

Proposals of questions that doesn't require the use of framework or library are welcome.


Google Apps Script uses JavaScript as programming language but it doesn't support some features and doesn't support most of the Web API's commonly used with JavaScript like DOM. Considering this I think that most of frequent questions on aren't appropriate for .

In other words, "vanilla javascript" like answers that marginally use something extra might be easily applied in Google Apps Script projects. Answers that require the use of frameworks with specialized vocabulary / practices is very unlikely that could not be applied in this platform, i.e. Google Apps Script doesn't support import, export(Promise, async/ await syntax is supported, but only works synchronously), also Google Apps Script web apps have some restrictions for client-side code.

has a lot of questions trying to get a SpreadsheetApp.Sheet object but the method used returns null, i.e. because the sheet name was was misspelled, the sheet was renamed, etc. Something similar happens with other Google Apps Script services (CalendarApp, ContactsApp, DocsApp, DriveApp, FormsApp, SlidesApp, etc.)

As happens with other platforms, the explanation about what is and why it happens and how it's fixed in broad terms is the same, just the way to reproduce the problem and debug it might differ a bit because the use of an online Editor IDE and the JavaScript supported features, less frequently depends on the specific Google Apps Script service used.

As happens in other tags, the OP's usually didn't included a "mcve". Also there is no real value to have a lot questions where the only significant difference are the variable names.


Sample questions by Google Apps Script service and method returning null.


Related

19
  • 2
    Considering this I think that most of frequent questions on javascript aren't appropriate for google-apps-script. This is only true, where the web apis are used. Considering this specific question, there is no specific webapi usage and [js] questions are valid duplicates. But I cannot find a canonical in [js] for this error either.
    – TheMaster
    Oct 10, 2022 at 7:13
  • 1
    Just found this: How to resolve TypeError: Cannot convert undefined or null to object but I don't think that will work as google-apps-script FAQ for most of the questions as it's about replicating JSON.stringify
    – Wicket
    Oct 10, 2022 at 15:04
  • Nice find. Agree it won't work as a dupe target. This is getting harder than I imagined.
    – TheMaster
    Oct 10, 2022 at 15:22
  • 1
    "Web API" is (was?) somewhat ambiguous due to "Web API", a Microsoft invasion (yes, often the exact same spelling is used in many contexts, possibly as a shorthand for "ASP.NET Web API". Sample). Oct 11, 2022 at 15:52
  • @PeterMortensen Thanks (for the edits and the comment). Edited (Web API's commonly used with JavaScript and added a link pointing to developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API
    – Wicket
    Oct 11, 2022 at 16:00
  • 1
    But the reasons for the error occurring are the same in JavaScript or [google-apps-script] (which IINM is just an SDK on top of JavaScript); You're trying to get/set a property on undefined, which doesn't have those. Not sure why it makes sense to create more confusion by having different sets of canonicals. For instance, "google-apps-script has a lot of questions trying to get a SpreadsheetApp.Sheet object but the method used returns null, i.e. because the sheet name was was misspelled, the sheet was renamed, etc." Same thing happens with DOM selection getElement(s)By* and the like. Oct 15, 2022 at 0:43
  • @HereticMonkey Thanks for you reply. Please suggest a canonical question that work "universally".
    – Wicket
    Oct 15, 2022 at 0:48
  • Ugh, those questions get asked about once an hour. 27,798 and counting.... Oct 15, 2022 at 1:07
  • Are you sure that we only need one canonical?
    – Wicket
    Oct 15, 2022 at 1:17
  • What about one of views:500000 ?(there are only 5)
    – Wicket
    Oct 15, 2022 at 1:24
  • 1
    @HereticMonkey Is there something more vanilla? Which doesn't depend on the browser apis or jquery or react, but something that depends on plain objects or arrays?
    – TheMaster
    Oct 15, 2022 at 19:54
  • I think that's perfection getting in the way of good. Any question asked here is going to depend on an object with a property. Does it matter if that's a DOM object, a jQuery object, a React object, or a "plain" object? I mean, jQuery and React objects are "plain" objects that just happen to be defined within libraries... Oct 15, 2022 at 20:04
  • 1
    Perhaps this new question might fit the bill :) stackoverflow.com/q/74103470/215552 Oct 17, 2022 at 21:34
  • 1
    @HereticMonkey Thanks. It quickly is getting feedback, that is really great... I think that I will be able to add my own a bit later.
    – Wicket
    Oct 17, 2022 at 21:54
  • 1
    @HereticMonkey Posted your "FAQ proposal" as answer to provide feedback considering this context. P.S. Wondering if it could be convenient to add a link to this question and/or metione that it's a "FAQ proposal".
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 9:22

4 Answers 4

2

I think that we might have a reference question for Google Apps Script classes like CalendarApp, ContactsApp, DocumentsApp, GmailApp, SpreadsheetApp, SlidesApp, that access end-user Google resources through Google user accounts.

By resources I mean, files stored in Google Drive, calendars and events from Google Calendars, contacts from Google Contacts, emails from Gmail, probably groups (emailing lists) from Google Groups, etc.

Some of the services might return null if the user hasn't access to the resource or if part of the resource, i.e. a sheet in a spreadsheet, doesn't match the parameter used, i.e. the sheet name.


There are some questions that might include TypeError: Cannot... undefined but the cause of the problem is having received null, like in the following case


The focus might be the basics of how works for this types of resources how the parts might be retrieved, how to debug TypeError: Cannot ... of null (i.e. how to check the that a sheet name is correct) and known problems like using Google accounts multiple sign-in might cause that Google Apps Script use the credentials of an unexpected account and to provide guidance on how to create a "mcve" in case that question authors require further help.

This reference question/answer might be included in the canonical questions for each app if they are really needed.


Question about Apps Script issues with multiple Sign-in


Sample reference questions

2

Posted a proposed FAQ1 here to provide feedback about using it in this context ( questions ) either as reference (link in comments / answers) or as original (close as duplicate)

Source: How to solve TypeError: Cannot read property '' of undefined (rev 1)

Question

Some simple code that I feel should work:

function getUser(id) {
  // get user from DB
  var user;
  return user;
}

var user = getUser(1);

var uid = user.getId();

console.log(uid);

The error is:

Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'getId')

What is going on?


Source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/74103471/1595451 (rev 1)

Answer

The function that is supposed to be setting user to an object with a getId() method is instead returning undefined. That value does not have any properties or methods, so it throws the error shown.

There are several ways around the error, but it comes down to deciding what you want to do when getUser returns undefined. You can throw a different, more informative error. Either at the time you know you didn't get a User back from getUser(1):

class User {
  #id = 1;
  constructor() {}
  get id() {
    return this.#id;
  }
  set id(value) {
    this.#id = value;
  }
  getId() {
    return this.id;
  }
}

function getUser(id) {
  // get user from DB
  var user;
  return user;
}

var user = getUser(1);

if (!(user instanceof User)) {
  throw new Error(`The value returned from getUser(1): ${JSON.stringify(user)} was not a User.`);
}

var uid = user.getId();

console.log(uid);

Or later, via the "optional chaining" operator:

class User {
  #id = 1;
  constructor() {}
  get id() {
    return this.#id;
  }
  set id(value) {
    this.#id = value;
  }
  getId() {
    return this.id;
  }
}

function getUser(id) {
  // get user from DB
  var user;
  return user;
}

var user = getUser(1);

var uid = user?.getId();

if (isNaN(uid)) {
  throw new Error(`The value returned from getUser(1).getId(): ${JSON.stringify(uid)} was not a number.`);
}

console.log(uid);

You can also just choose to pass the problem on to the next consumer. So, assuming the code is part of a tautological getUserId(userId) function, you could pass the undefined on, again, via our friend the optional chaining operator ?..

class User {
  #id = 1;
  constructor() {}
  get id() {
    return this.#id;
  }
  set id(value) {
    this.#id = value;
  }
  getId() {
    return this.id;
  }
}

function getUser(id) {
  // get user from DB
  var user;
  return user;
}

function getUserId(id) {
  var user = getUser(id);
  var uid = user?.getId();
  return uid;
}

console.log(getUserId(1));

8
  • IMHO most of the questions that might be closed as duplicate were posted by people that are new to Google Apps Script / JavaScript. Considering this, I think that terms like "consumer" and "tautological" might be convenient to be explained or to include a reference. By the other hand the optional chaining operator isn't supported in Google Apps Script. Ref. stackoverflow.com/a/64346434/1595451 (include a link to Apps Script issue marked as "Won't fix", apparently it's not supported in v8)
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 9:28
  • <s>I don't know if # is supported in Apps Script</s> # prefix isn't supported in Apps Script. Ref. issuetracker.google.com/issues/239767510#comment2. Related Are private class properties supported in Google Apps Script?, What does the '#' sign mean in JavaScript?
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 9:37
  • 1
    I edited my answer there as soon as I got a upvote. I know that chaining with all other latest features is working for the past few months. We should also edit the SO answer to use optional chaining in favor of logical OR ||
    – TheMaster
    Oct 18, 2022 at 10:43
  • A busy morning, eh! :) Thanks. I'm wondering if nullish coalescing operator (??) might be an option (found thanks to the MDN ?. article "see also" section, <sidenote> I'll be away form SO for several hours</sidenote>)
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 10:47
  • 1
    Null coalescing also works. I didn't test it today. It's been a few days(months?), that I've known that it's indeed working. Google upgrades the underlying v8 engine regularly without any notifications to us.
    – TheMaster
    Oct 18, 2022 at 10:50
  • I can run the examples in Google Chrome & Node, which uses V8, so all of this is available in V8. Whether it's available in Google Apps Script is a different matter. My main concern was not the syntax, but just getting an example out there. I've made some changes to it since posting. Feel free to edit it (I've asked to make it a CW also). Oct 18, 2022 at 15:32
  • @HereticMonkey "Google Apps Script" is in the question title, as well that it was mentioned multiple times, so it's fair to say that basic premise is that Google Apps Script deserves a canonical question about the referred error. I don't say that your self-answered question is bad, just that as it was the last time I saw it, it is not what we are looking for here.
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 17:06
  • @Rubén I understand that. But my purpose for the question was not to serve Google Apps Script, but the larger JavaScript community. And there's no reason the question can't serve both communities, since Google Apps Script runs on JavaScript, and answering the question sufficiently broadly will be of use to both. I'm not sure why people are getting hung up on the syntax of ancillary objects that are just there to frame the question. Oct 18, 2022 at 17:15
2


Self-answered question posted and set as community wiki: Reference : TypeError: Cannot read property [property name here] from undefined


Question

Posted as Community Wikis Reference : TypeError: Cannot read property [property name here] from undefined

Title

Reference : TypeError: Cannot read property [property name here] from undefined

Body

Tags

Answer

Posted as community wiki: https://stackoverflow.com/a/74109027/1595451

Extract from https://stackoverflow.com/a/62336083

Message

TypeError: Cannot read property 'property name here' from undefined (or null)

Move to the question title; make specific about undefined

Description

The error message indicates that you are trying to access a property on an Object instance, but during runtime the value actually held by a variable is a special data type undefined. Typically, the error occurs when accessing nested properties of an object.

A variation of this error with a numeric value in place of property name indicates that an instance of Array was expected. As arrays in JavaScript are objects, everything mentioned here is true about them as well.

There is a special case of dynamically constructed objects such as event objects that are only available in specific contexts like making an HTTP request to the app or invoking a function via time or event-based trigger.

The error is a TypeError because an "object" is expected, but "undefined" is received

How to fix

  1. Using default values
    Logical OR || operator in JavaScript has an interesting property of evaluating the right-hand side of the left-hand is falsy. Since objects in JS are truthy, and undefined and null are falsy, an expression like (myVar || {}).myProp [(myVar || [])[index] for arrays] will guarantee that no error is thrown and the property is at least undefined.

    One can also provide default values: (myVar || { myProp : 2 }) guarantees accessing myProp to return 2 by default. Same goes for arrays: (myVar || [1,2,3]).

  2. Checking for type
    Especially true for the special case, typeof operator combined with an if statement and a comparison operator will either allow a function to run outside of its designated context (i.e. for debugging purposes) or introduce branching logic depending on whether the object is present or not.

    One can control how strict the check should be:

    • lax ("not undefined"): if(typeof myVar !== "undefined") { //do something; }
    • strict ("proper objects only"): if(typeof myVar === "object" && myVar) { //do stuff }
  3. [Arrays] length property being greater than the numeric valueAdded

Array.prototype.length returns the number of elements of the Array. This number always should be greater than the numeric value (aka index) as JavaScript uses 0 based indices.

Related Q&As

1. Parsing order of the GAS project as the source of the issueMove to the question body

7
  • The description should be extended to include common cases in google-apps-script i.e. SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getSheetByName('Sheet 1') returned null as well the "how to fix" that might be to use the correct sheet name.
    – Wicket
    Oct 10, 2022 at 4:20
  • 3
    I think it's important to realize null is not undefined and the errors shouldn't be merged. See stackoverflow.com/questions/5076944/… Unlike undefined, null is "assigned" on purpose. null in apps script is almost exclusively related to sheet name, while others are related to undefined variables, which this answer explains. For null, I propose stackoverflow.com/questions/56690325 or something specific
    – TheMaster
    Oct 10, 2022 at 7:17
  • @TheMaster Thanks. I agree with you ... null is no undefine / TypeError + null and TypeError + undefined very likely deserve their own FAQ, actually TypeError + undefined might require more than one, i.e. we already have How can I test a trigger function in GAS? and others
    – Wicket
    Oct 10, 2022 at 14:52
  • 1
    I'm wondering whether there are significant amount of questions outside of [triggers] e Type error to warrant another FAQ for "TypeError + undefined." Typeerror +null other than sheetname, is related to Spreadsheet being null: stackoverflow.com/questions/56741432/…
    – TheMaster
    Oct 10, 2022 at 15:26
  • 1
    I have lot of suggestions, but I think it can be directly made to question after it is posted to Stack Overflow
    – TheMaster
    Oct 16, 2022 at 4:40
  • 1
    @TheMaster Posted: stackoverflow.com/q/74109026/1595451. I'm not sure about the process to mark the question as Wiki... I know that it should be flagged to mod but not sure what the flag report should be made after certain participation level
    – Wicket
    Oct 18, 2022 at 9:56
  • 1
    I think a link to this meta should be enough to get community wiki.
    – TheMaster
    Oct 18, 2022 at 10:01
0

Question

Taken from TypeError when trying to use getRange

Title

TypeError when trying to use getRange

Body

NOTE: This is a proposal of canonical Q/A

As a new Google Apps Script user, I'm struggling about how to fix this error

This happen when using the default runtime

TypeError: Cannot read property 'getRange' of null

This happen when using the old runtime

TypeError: Cannot call method "getRange" of null.

Bounded project

function myFunction(){
  const spreadsheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
  const sheet = spreadsheet.getSheetByName('my sheet');
  sheet.getRange('A1');
}

Standalone project

function myFunction(){
  const spreadsheet = SpreadsheetApp.openByUrl('put_here_a_spreadsheet_url');
  const sheet = spreadsheet.getSheetByName('my sheet');
  sheet.getRange('A1');
}

Using getActiveSpredsheet() and getRange directly from the spreadsheet variable

function myFunction(){
  const spreadsheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
  spreadsheet.getRange('A1');
}

Tags

Answer

Taken from https://stackoverflow.com/a/71631630/1595451

The error occurs because the spreadsheet hasn't a sheet named my sheet. Please bear in mind that the getSheetByName parameter should be exactly the same as the sheet name:

  • Same number of characters
  • Same casing (uppercase / lowercase)
  • The characters not only should look the same way, they should be the same i.e. a space looks similar to the human eye as a non-breaking-space but for the computers they aren't the same.

You might try typing the sheet name again both on the Google Sheets UI and on the Google Apps Script editor, or copy the name from one place and paste it into the other.

NOTE: You could use a variable name or put the sheet name directly inside the parenthesis. If you go for putting the sheet name inside the parenthesis it should be enclosed between ' (apostrophe / straight single quote), " (straight double quote) or ` (grave accent / backtick).

The same error might happen when using getActiveSpreadsheet() or getActiveSheet() there is no active spreadsheet or active sheet respectively. This usually happen when using these methods on stand-alone projects. In these cases, first you have to open the spreadsheet by using one of the following SpreadsheetApp methods open(file), openById(id), openByUrl(url), then you might use .activate() before getActiveSpreadsheet() / getActiveSheet() methods.

Resources

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