Use a helper function to abstract away the nastiness:
function isError_(cell) {
// Cell is a value, e.g. came from `range.getValue()` or is an element of an array from `range.getValues()`
const errorValues = ["#N/A", "#REF", .... ];
for (var i = 0; i < errorValues.length; ++i)
if (cell == errorValues[i])
return true;
return false;
}
function foo() {
const vals = SpreadsheetApp.getActive().getSheets()[0].getDataRange().getValues();
for (var row = 0; row < vals.length; ++row) {
for (var col = 0; col < vals[0].length; ++col) {
if (isError_(vals[row][col])) {
Logger.log("Array element (" + row + ", " + col + ") is an error value.");
}
}
}
}
Using Array#indexOf in the helper function:
function isError_(cell) {
// Cell is a value, e.g. came from `range.getValue()` or is an element of an array from `range.getValues()`
// Note: indexOf uses strict equality when comparing cell to elements of errorValues, so make sure everything's a primitive...
const errorValues = ["#N/A", "#REF", .... ];
return (errorValues.indexOf(cell) !== -1);
}
If/when Google Apps Script is upgraded with Array#includes, that would be a better option than Array#indexOf:
function isError_(cell) {
// cell is a value, e.g. came from `range.getValue()` or is an element of an array from `range.getValues()`
const errorValues = ["#N/A", "#REF", .... ];
return errorValues.includes(cell);
}
Now that the v8 runtime is available, there are a number of other changes one could make to the above code snippets (arrow functions, etc) but note that changing things in this manner is not required.