Mention that the not operator cannot be used with Strings and StringNames

This commit is contained in:
Tim Yuen
2023-05-18 23:05:41 -04:00
committed by Max Hilbrunner
parent 8f25cc2d13
commit 18fa7cf967
2 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
You will usually just pass a [String] to methods expecting a [StringName] and it will be automatically converted, but you may occasionally want to construct a [StringName] ahead of time with the [StringName] constructor or, in GDScript, the literal syntax [code]&"example"[/code].
See also [NodePath], which is a similar concept specifically designed to store pre-parsed scene tree paths.
All of [String]'s methods are available in this class too. They convert the [StringName] into a string, and they also return a string. This is highly inefficient and should only be used if the string is desired.
[b]Note:[/b] In a boolean context, a [StringName] will evaluate to [code]false[/code] if it is empty ([code]StringName("")[/code]). Otherwise, a [StringName] will always evaluate to [code]true[/code].
[b]Note:[/b] In a boolean context, a [StringName] will evaluate to [code]false[/code] if it is empty ([code]StringName("")[/code]). Otherwise, a [StringName] will always evaluate to [code]true[/code]. The [code]not[/code] operator cannot be used. Instead, [method is_empty] should be used to check for empty [StringName]s.
</description>
<tutorials>
</tutorials>