Hi Scott,

Yes, so true, thanks.

Jacques

From: "Scott Gray" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Hi Jacques

The shortcut ternary operator (?:) would work:
productTypeId = null;
if ("FINISHED_GOOD" == productTypeId ?: "FINISHED_GOOD")

Scott

2008/6/7 Jacques Le Roux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

Yes, it should I guess.

BTW (and a bit OS) I don't think there is a default operator in Groovy like
! in freemarker
http://freemarker.sourceforge.net/docs/dgui_template_exp.html#dgui_template_exp_missing_default

Jacques

From: "David E Jones" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Does the groovy "?" operator thrown in different places solve this
 problem?

It seems like it's kind of like the "?if_exists" in FTL, and may help
 with things like this.

-David


On Jun 5, 2008, at 4:06 AM, Scott Gray wrote:

 Hi Jacopo

I just ran a quick test and Groovy seems to throw an error when an
undeclared variable is used.

Scott

2008/6/5 Jacopo Cappellato <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:


In fact for the Beanshell interpreter (by the way... should we  consider
to
use Groovy instead of Beanshell for the use-when scripts too?) an
 undeclared
variable is void but not null.





Reply via email to