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By pure accident I've stumbled upon a dfference between NaN and 10 / 0. I'm interested in the reason for this behavior. Here is my code, using the console of FF 34.

//as expected:
console.log(NaN == false); //->false

//now:
function m(value) { if (value) { return 'hi, NaN is not falsy'; }} console.log(m( 5 / 0)); //->"hi, NaN is not falsy"
//of course:
console.log(typeof NaN); //-> "number"
//but:
function m(value) { if (value) { return 'hi, NaN is not falsy'; }} console.log(m(NaN)); //-> undefined

Thank you very much for any advice!

::Edit::

Alright, my fault:

function m(value) { if (value) { return 'hi, NaN is not falsy'; }} console.log(m(parseInt('hi', 10))); //->undefined
1
  • 1
    console.log(5 / 0); console.log(NaN);
    – deceze
    Jan 8, 2015 at 9:28

2 Answers 2

3

Whenever you divide the number by 0 it becomes Infinity not false.

0

For an explanation to the WHY it comes to Infinity, it's because that's how floating point math works:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point#Infinities

(I had no idea either, but it does make sense when you read it)

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