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Null safety: Frequently asked questions

This page collects some common questions we’ve heard about null safety based on the experience of migrating Google internal code.

What runtime changes should I be aware of for users of migrated code?

Most of the effects of migration do not immediately affect users of migrated code:

  • Static null safety checks for users first apply when they migrate their code.
  • Full null safety checks happen when all the code is migrated and sound mode is turned on.

Two exceptions to be aware of are:

  • The ! operator is a runtime null check in all modes, for all users. So, when migrating, ensure that you only add ! where it’s an error for a null to flow to that location, even if the calling code has not migrated yet.
  • Runtime checks associated with the late keyword apply in all modes, for all users. Only mark a field late if you are sure it is always initialized before it is used.

What if a value is only null in tests?

If a value is only ever null in tests, the code can be improved by marking it non-nullable and making the tests pass non-null values.

How does @required compare to the new required keyword?

The @required annotation marks named arguments that must be passed; if not, the analyzer reports a hint.

With null safety, a named argument with a non-nullable type must either have a default or be marked with the new required keyword. Otherwise, it wouldn’t make sense for it to be non-nullable, because it would default to null when not passed.

When null safe code is called from legacy code the required keyword is treated exactly like the @required annotation: failure to supply the argument will cause an analyzer hint.

When null safe code is called from null safe code, failing to supply a required argument is an error.

What does this mean for migration? Be careful if adding required where there was no @required before. Any callers not passing the newly-required argument will no longer compile. Instead, you could add a default or make the argument type nullable.

How should I migrate non-nullable fields that should be final, but aren’t?

Some computations can be moved to the static initializer. Instead of:

// Initialized without values
ListQueue _context;
Float32List _buffer;
dynamic _readObject;

Vec2D(Map<String, dynamic> object) {
  _buffer = Float32List.fromList([0.0, 0.0]);
  _readObject = object['container'];
  _context = ListQueue<dynamic>();
}

you can do:

// Initialized with values
final ListQueue _context = ListQueue<dynamic>();
final Float32List _buffer = Float32List.fromList([0.0, 0.0]);
final dynamic _readObject;

Vec2D(Map<String, dynamic> object) : _readObject = object['container'];

However, if a field is initialized by doing computation in the constructor, then it can’t be final. With null safety, you’ll find this also makes it harder for it to be non-nullable; if it’s initialized too late, then it’s null until it’s initialized, and must be nullable. Fortunately, you have options:

  • Turn the constructor into a factory, then make it delegate to an actual constructor that initializes all the fields directly. A common name for such a private constructor is just an underscore: _. Then, the field can be final and non-nullable. This refactoring can be done before the migration to null safety.
  • Or, mark the field late final. This enforces that it’s initialized exactly once. It must be initialized before it can be read.

How should I migrate a built_value class?

Getters that were annotated @nullable should instead have nullable types; then remove all @nullable annotations. For example:

@nullable
int get count;

becomes

int? get count; //  Variable initialized with ?

Getters that were not marked @nullable should not have nullable types, even if the migration tool suggests them. Add ! hints as needed then rerun the analysis.

How should I migrate a factory that can return null?

Prefer factories that do not return null. We have seen code that meant to throw an exception due to invalid input but instead ended up returning null.

Instead of:

factory StreamReader(dynamic data) {
  StreamReader reader;
  if (data is ByteData) {
    reader = BlockReader(data);
  } else if (data is Map) {
    reader = JSONBlockReader(data);
  }
  return reader;
}

Do:

factory StreamReader(dynamic data) {
  if (data is ByteData) {
    // Move the readIndex forward for the binary reader.
    return BlockReader(data);
  } else if (data is Map) {
    return JSONBlockReader(data);
  } else {
    throw ArgumentError('Unexpected type for data');
  }
}

If the intent of the factory was indeed to return null, then you can turn it into a static method so it is allowed to return null.

How should I migrate an assert(x != null) that now shows as unnecessary?

The assert will be unnecessary when everything is fully migrated, but for now it is needed if you actually want to keep the check. Options:

  • Decide that the assert is not really necessary, and remove it. This is a change in behavior when asserts are enabled.
  • Decide that the assert can be checked always, and turn it into ArgumentError.checkNotNull. This is a change in behavior when asserts are not enabled.
  • Keep the behavior exactly as is: add // ignore: unnecessary_null_comparison to bypass the warning.

How should I migrate a runtime null check that now shows as unnecessary?

The compiler flags an explicit runtime null check as an unnecessary comparison if you make arg non-nullable.

if (arg == null) throw ArgumentError(...)`

You must include this check if the program is a mixed-version one. Until everything is fully migrated and the code switches to running with sound null safety, arg might be set to null.

The simplest way to preserve behavior is change the check into ArgumentError.checkNotNull.

The same applies to some runtime type checks. If arg has static type String, then if (arg is! String) is actually checking whether arg is null. It might look like migrating to null safety means arg can never be null, but it could be null in unsound null safety. So, to preserve behavior, the null check should remain.

The Iterable.firstWhere method no longer accepts orElse: () => null.

Import package:collection and use the extension method firstWhereOrNull instead of firstWhere.

How do I deal with attributes that have setters?

Unlike the late final suggestion above, these attributes cannot be marked as final. Often, settable attributes also do not have initial values since they are expected to be set sometime later.

In such cases, you have two options:

  • Set it to an initial value. Often times, the omission of an initial value is by mistake rather than deliberate.
  • If you are sure that the attribute needs to be set before accessed, mark it as late.

    WARNING: The late keyword adds a runtime check. If any user calls get before set they’ll get an error at runtime.

How do I signal that the return value from a Map is non-nullable?

The lookup operator on Map ([]) by default returns a nullable type. There’s no way to signal to the language that the value is guaranteed to be there.

In this case, you should use the bang operator (!) to cast the value back to V:

return blockTypes[key]!;

Which will throw if the map returns null. If you want explicit handling for that case:

var result = blockTypes[key];
if (result != null) return result;
// Handle the null case here, e.g. throw with explanation.

Why is the generic type on my List/Map nullable?

It is typically a code smell to end up with nullable code like this:

List<Foo?> fooList; // fooList can contain null values

This implies fooList might contain null values. This might happen if you are initializing the list with length and filling it in via a loop.

If you are simply initializing the list with the same value, you should instead use the filled constructor.

_jellyCounts = List<int?>(jellyMax + 1);
for (var i = 0; i <= jellyMax; i++) {
  _jellyCounts[i] = 0; // List initialized with the same value
}
_jellyCounts = List<int>.filled(jellyMax + 1, 0); // List initialized with filled constructor

If you are setting the elements of the list via an index, or you are populating each element of the list with a distinct value, you should instead use the list literal syntax to build the list.

_jellyPoints = List<Vec2D?>(jellyMax + 1);
for (var i = 0; i <= jellyMax; i++) {
  _jellyPoints[i] = Vec2D(); // Each list element is a distinct Vec2D
}
_jellyPoints = [
  for (var i = 0; i <= jellyMax; i++)
    Vec2D() // Each list element is a distinct Vec2D
];

To generate a fixed-length list, use the List.generate constructor with the growable parameter set to false:

_jellyPoints = List.generate(jellyMax, (_) => Vec2D(), growable: false);

What happened to the default List constructor?

You may encounter this error:

The default 'List' constructor isn't available when null safety is enabled. #default_list_constructor

The default list constructor fills the list with null, which is a problem.

Change it to List.filled(length, default) instead.

I’m using package:ffi and get a failure with Dart_CObject_kUnsupported when I migrate. What happened?

Lists sent via ffi can only be List<dynamic>, not List<Object> or List<Object?>. If you didn’t change a list type explicitly in your migration, a type might still have changed because of changes to type inference that happen when you enable null safety.

The fix is to explicitly create such lists as List<dynamic>.

Why does the migration tool add comments to my code?

The migration tool adds /* == false */ or /* == true */ comments when it sees conditions that will always be false or true while running in sound mode. Comments like these might indicate that the automatic migration is incorrect and needs human intervention. For example:

if (registry.viewFactory(viewDescriptor.id) == null /* == false */)

In these cases, the migration tool can’t distinguish defensive-coding situations and situations where a null value is really expected. So the tool tells you what it knows (“it looks like this condition will always be false!”) and lets you decide what to do.

What should I know about compiling to JavaScript and null safety?

Null safety brings many benefits like reduced code size and improved app performance. Such benefits surface more when compiled to native targets like Flutter and AOT. Previous work on the production web compiler had introduced optimizations similar to what null safety later introduced. This may make resulting gains to production web apps seem less than their native targets.

A few notes that are worth highlighting:

  • The production JavaScript compiler generates ! null assertions. You might not notice them when comparing the output of the compiler before and after adding null assertions. That’s because the compiler already generated null checks in programs that weren’t null safe.

  • The compiler generates these null assertions regardless of the soundness of null safety or optimization level. In fact, the compiler doesn’t remove ! when using -O3 or --omit-implicit-checks.

  • The production JavaScript compiler might remove unnecessary null checks. This happens because the optimizations that the production web compiler made prior to null safety removed those checks when it knew the value was not null.

  • By default, the compiler would generate parameter subtype checks. These runtime checks ensure covariant virtual calls have appropriate arguments. The compiler skips these checks with the --omit-implicit-checks option. Using this option can generate apps with unexpected behavior if the code includes invalid types. To avoid any surprises, continue provide strong test coverage for your code. In particular, the compiler optimizes code based on the fact that inputs should comply with the type declaration. If the code provides arguments of an invalid type, those optimizations would be wrong and the program could misbehave. This was true for inconsistent types before, and is true with inconsistent nullabilities now with sound null-safety.

  • You may notice that the development JavaScript compiler and the Dart VM have special error messages for null checks, but to keep applications small, the production JavaScript compiler does not.

  • You may see errors indicating that .toString is not found on null. This is not a bug. The compiler has always encoded some null checks in this way. That is, the compiler represents some null checks compactly by making an unguarded access of a property of the receiver. So instead of if (a == null) throw, it generates a.toString. The toString method is defined in JavaScript Object and is a fast way to verify that an object is not null.

    If the very first action after a null check is an action that crashes when the value is null, the compiler can remove the null check and let the action cause the error.

    For example, a Dart expression print(a!.foo()); could turn directly into:

      P.print(a.foo$0());
    

    This is because the call a.foo$() will crash if a is null. If the compiler inlines foo, it will preserve the null check. So for example, if foo was int foo() => 1; the compiler might generate:

      a.toString;
      P.print(1);
    

    If the inlined method first accessed a field on the receiver, like int foo() => this.x + 1;, then the production compiler can remove the redundant a.toString null check, as non-inlined calls, and generate:

      P.print(a.x + 1);
    

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