noSuchMethod method Null safety

  1. @override
dynamic noSuchMethod(
  1. Invocation invocation
)
override

Invoked when a non-existent method or property is accessed.

A dynamic member invocation can attempt to call a member which doesn't exist on the receiving object. Example:

dynamic object = 1;
object.add(42); // Statically allowed, run-time error

This invalid code will invoke the noSuchMethod method of the integer 1 with an Invocation representing the .add(42) call and arguments (which then throws).

Classes can override noSuchMethod to provide custom behavior for such invalid dynamic invocations.

A class with a non-default noSuchMethod invocation can also omit implementations for members of its interface. Example:

class MockList<T> implements List<T> {
  noSuchMethod(Invocation invocation) {
    log(invocation);
    super.noSuchMethod(invocation); // Will throw.
  }
}
void main() {
  MockList().add(42);
}

This code has no compile-time warnings or errors even though the MockList class has no concrete implementation of any of the List interface methods. Calls to List methods are forwarded to noSuchMethod, so this code will log an invocation similar to Invocation.method(#add, [42]) and then throw.

If a value is returned from noSuchMethod, it becomes the result of the original invocation. If the value is not of a type that can be returned by the original invocation, a type error occurs at the invocation.

The default behavior is to throw a NoSuchMethodError.

Implementation

@override
dynamic noSuchMethod(Invocation invocation) {
  final propertyName = entity.runtime!.getPropertyName(invocation, entity);
  if (propertyName != null) {
    if (invocation.isGetter) {
      return this[propertyName];
    } else if (invocation.isSetter) {
      this[propertyName] = invocation.positionalArguments.first;

      return null;
    }
  }

  throw NoSuchMethodError.withInvocation(this, invocation);
}