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Home/ Questions/Q 905981
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:18:38+00:00 2026-05-15T16:18:38+00:00

I have reduced down to a small example some code that I have, which

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I have reduced down to a small example some code that I have, which tests for whether a variable called class-name has a value assigned to it:

ask-params: function [
    config-file [file!]
    default-class-name
    default-fields
] [
    probe value? 'class-name
    input
    either (value? 'class-name) [
        probe class-name
    ] [
        ;-- omit code in this branch for now
    ]
]

ret-block: ask-params %simple-class.params.txt "Person" "First Name, Last Name"

The expression value? 'class-name returns false here. On the other hand, if I fill in the missing branch with an assignment:

ask-params: function [
    config-file [file!]
    default-class-name
    default-fields
] [
    probe value? 'class-name
    input
    either (value? 'class-name) [
        probe class-name
    ] [
        class-name: default-class-name
    ]
]

ret-block: ask-params %simple-class.params.txt "Person" "First Name, Last Name"

This will return true for value? 'class-name. But in this second case, class-name: default-class-name isn’t even executed yet.

I would think that class-name shouldn’t exist in memory, so value? 'class-name should be returning false. Why is value? returning true instead?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:18:39+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:18 pm

    You are using function. This scans the body of the function and pre-creates the local variables for you, initialized to NONE. That’s why value? 'class-name becomes true (because NONE is a legal value for a variable, distinct from the situation of being “unset”).

    If you used func instead, then both would return false.

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