show/hide this revision's text 3 added 175 characters in body

Update: I tried clearing the created cookie in the browser and trying it again, and it didn't happen. Conceivably I set a cookie with the value "null" at some point.

(Ok, this is probably a retorical question, so I'm making it CW)

The documentation for Google Web Toolkit says this about Cookies.getCookie:

public static java.lang.String getCookie(java.lang.String name)

Gets the cookie associated with the given name.

Parameters:

  • name - the name of the cookie to be retrieved

Returns:

  • the cookie's value, or null if the cookie doesn't exist

Well, I've just spent a number of hours beating my head against a wall because at least in the hosted mode browser (I haven't tested with a real browser yet), it doesn't return null, it returns "null", ie the literal string, 4 characters long starting with "n".

Both null and "null" look remarkably similar if you print them out, but only one responds to a if (cookie == null) Cookies.setCookie(cookie, newValue);

Is there any conceivable reason why Google did it this way, or is somebody just screwing me around?

show/hide this revision's text 2 Trying to format javadoc a little better

(Ok, this is probably a retorical question, so I'm making it CW)

The documentation for Google Web Toolkit says this about Cookies.getCookie:

getCookie

public static java.lang.String getCookie(java.lang.String name)

Gets the cookie associated with the given name.

Parameters:

  • name - the name of the cookie to be retrieved

Returns:

  • the cookie's value, or null if the cookie doesn't exist

Well, I've just spent a number of hours beating my head against a wall because at least in the hosted mode browser (I haven't tested with a real browser yet), it doesn't return null, it returns "null", ie the literal string, 4 characters long starting with "n".

Both null and "null" look remarkably similar if you print them out, but only one responds to a if (cookie == null) Cookies.setCookie(cookie, newValue);

Is there any conceivable reason why Google did it this way, or is somebody just screwing me around?

show/hide this revision's text 1 [made Community Wiki]

GWT Cookies.getCookie returns "null"

(Ok, this is probably a retorical question, so I'm making it CW)

The documentation for Google Web Toolkit says this about Cookies.getCookie:

getCookie

public static java.lang.String getCookie(java.lang.String name)
Gets the cookie associated with the given name.
Parameters:
name - the name of the cookie to be retrieved
Returns:
the cookie's value, or null if the cookie doesn't exist

Well, I've just spent a number of hours beating my head against a wall because at least in the hosted mode browser (I haven't tested with a real browser yet), it doesn't return null, it returns "null", ie the literal string, 4 characters long starting with "n".

Both null and "null" look remarkably similar if you print them out, but only one responds to a if (cookie == null) Cookies.setCookie(cookie, newValue);

Is there any conceivable reason why Google did it this way, or is somebody just screwing me around?