380 Chapter 12: ActionScript Dictionary
Example
Running the following code gives the result, Hello%7B%5BWorld%5D%7D.
escape("Hello{[World]}");
See also
unescape
eval()
Availability
Flash Player 5 or later for full functionality. You can use the eval() function when exporting to
Flash Player 4, but you must use slash notation, and can only access variables, not properties
or objects.
Usage
eval(expression)
Parameters
expression
A string containing the name of a variable, property, object, or movie clip
to retrieve.
Returns
A value, reference to an object or movie clip, or undefined.
Description
Function; accesses variables, properties, objects, or movie clips by name. If expression is a
variable or a property, the value of the variable or property is returned. If
expression is an object
or movie clip, a reference to the object or movie clip is returned. If the element named in
expression cannot be found, undefined is returned.
In Flash 4,
eval() was used to simulate arrays; in Flash 5 or later, it is recommended that you use
the Array class to simulate arrays.
In Flash 4, you can also use
eval() to dynamically set and retrieve the value of a variable or
instance name. However, you can also do this with the array access operator (
[]).
In Flash 5 or later, you cannot use
eval() to dynamically set and retrieve the value of a variable or
instance name, because you cannot use eval() on the left side of an equation. For example,
replace the code
eval ("var" + i) = "first";
with this:
this["var"+i] = "first"
or this:
set ("var" + i, "first");