I want to catch an error when access outside of array's bounds happens but it doesn't seem to throw an error.
let arr = [2,4,5];
let test = arr[3];
console.log(test);
I know that I can test for undefined and throw an error
if (arr[3] === undefined) throw new Error();
but how come I can't just do try and catch it like the following.
let arr = [2,4,5];
try {
let tmp = arr[3];
} catch(e) {
lastIndex = findLastIndex(arr, high / 2, high);
break;
}
As you can see, accessing a non-existent array index does not throw an error - the value "accessed" will simply be undefined. Ordinary objects work the same way:
const obj = {};
// No error:
const val = obj.foo;
console.log(val);
But errors generally should not be used for control flow - errors should handle exceptional cases. For what you're doing, I'd use if/else instead, eg
const arr = [0, 1, 2];
if (4 in arr) {
const val = arr[4];
// ...
} else {
console.log('4 is not in the arr');
}
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