3218

How do I check if an object property in JavaScript is undefined?

2
  • Look for recent answers in this thread. In 'modern' javascript, consider using the in operator:'key' in obj ? 'obj has key property' : 'obj does not have key property' ` Aug 23, 2021 at 16:19
  • I’m open to picking a new ‘correct’ answer if you have one in mind that covers the old way as completely as the current one and also addresses more modern options. Aug 24, 2021 at 20:59

49 Answers 49

2940

The usual way to check if the value of a property is the special value undefined, is:

if(o.myProperty === undefined) {
  alert("myProperty value is the special value `undefined`");
}

To check if an object does not actually have such a property, and will therefore return undefined by default when you try to access it:

if(!o.hasOwnProperty('myProperty')) {
  alert("myProperty does not exist");
}

To check if the value associated with an identifier is the special value undefined, or if that identifier has not been declared:

if(typeof myVariable === 'undefined') {
  alert('myVariable is either the special value `undefined`, or it has not been declared');
}

Note: this last method is the only way to refer to an undeclared identifier without an early error, which is different from having a value of undefined.

In versions of JavaScript prior to ECMAScript 5, the property named "undefined" on the global object was writeable, and therefore a simple check foo === undefined might behave unexpectedly if it had accidentally been redefined. In modern JavaScript, the property is read-only.

However, in modern JavaScript, "undefined" is not a keyword, and so variables inside functions can be named "undefined" and shadow the global property.

If you are worried about this (unlikely) edge case, you can use the void operator to get at the special undefined value itself:

if(myVariable === void 0) {
  alert("myVariable is the special value `undefined`");
}
9
  • 10
    if something is null the it is defined (as null), but you can conjugate the too checks. The annoying detail of the above code is that you can't define a function to check it, well you can define the function... but try to use it.
    – neu-rah
    Jun 25, 2012 at 19:20
  • 6
    @neu-rah why can't you write a function? why wouldn't something like this work? It seems to work for me. Is there a case I'm not considering? jsfiddle.net/djH9N/6
    – Zack
    Sep 24, 2012 at 19:01
  • 8
    @Zack Your tests for isNullorUndefined did not consider the case where you call isNullOrUndefined(f) and f is undeclared (i.e. where there is no "var f" declaration).
    – pnkfelix
    Feb 15, 2013 at 15:08
  • 146
    Blah, thousands of votes now. This is the worst possible way to do it. I hope passers-by see this comment and decide to check… ahem… other answers.
    – Ry-
    May 14, 2014 at 3:05
  • 22
    You can just use obj !== undefined now. undefined used to be mutable, like undefined = 1234 what would cause interesting results. But after Ecmascript 5, it's not writable anymore, so we can use the simpler version. codereadability.com/how-to-check-for-undefined-in-javascript Mar 15, 2016 at 20:50
985

I believe there are a number of incorrect answers to this topic. Contrary to common belief, "undefined" is not a keyword in JavaScript and can in fact have a value assigned to it.

Correct Code

The most robust way to perform this test is:

if (typeof myVar === "undefined")

This will always return the correct result, and even handles the situation where myVar is not declared.

Degenerate code. DO NOT USE.

var undefined = false;  // Shockingly, this is completely legal!
if (myVar === undefined) {
    alert("You have been misled. Run away!");
}

Additionally, myVar === undefined will raise an error in the situation where myVar is undeclared.

18
  • 25
    in addition to Marks comments, I don't get this: "myVar === undefined will raise an error in the situation where myVar is undeclared." - why is this bad? Why would I not want to have an error if I'm referencing undeclared variables?
    – eis
    Aug 20, 2013 at 15:12
  • 6
    Also keep in mind you can always do void 0 to get the value that undefined points to. So you can do if (myVar === void 0). the 0 isn't special, you can literally put any expression there.
    – Claudiu
    Oct 3, 2013 at 17:45
  • 35
    In modern browsers (FF4+, IE9+, Chrome unknown), it's no longer possible to modify undefined. MDN: undefined
    – user247702
    Feb 7, 2014 at 14:09
  • 13
    This answer is incorrect as well. The question was about undefined object properties, not undefined variables. There is a significant difference. It is, for example, perfectly reasonable to do if (obj.field === undefined). I think the risk of someone doing var undefined = false; is overrated. You will have to program unreasonably defensive if you want to protect against all such kinds of side effects caused by poor programming.
    – Zero3
    Dec 15, 2015 at 15:38
  • 10
    Funny that people suggest these silly and error-prone hacks to avoid a shadowed undefined (which could only be done by a terrible developer), yet they blithely use other global identifiers that could also have been shadowed. Bizarre. Just bizarre.
    – user8897421
    Dec 18, 2017 at 13:39
287

Many answers here are vehement in recommending typeof, but typeof is a bad choice. It should never be used for checking whether variables have the value undefined, because it acts as a combined check for the value undefined and for whether a variable exists. In the vast majority of cases, you know when a variable exists, and typeof will just introduce the potential for a silent failure if you make a typo in the variable name or in the string literal 'undefined'.

var snapshot = …;

if (typeof snaposhot === 'undefined') {
    //         ^
    // misspelled¹ – this will never run, but it won’t throw an error!
}
var foo = …;

if (typeof foo === 'undefned') {
    //                   ^
    // misspelled – this will never run, but it won’t throw an error!
}

So unless you’re doing feature detection², where there’s uncertainty whether a given name will be in scope (like checking typeof module !== 'undefined' as a step in code specific to a CommonJS environment), typeof is a harmful choice when used on a variable, and the correct option is to compare the value directly:

var foo = …;

if (foo === undefined) {
    ⋮
}

Some common misconceptions about this include:

  • that reading an “uninitialized” variable (var foo) or parameter (function bar(foo) { … }, called as bar()) will fail. This is simply not true – variables without explicit initialization and parameters that weren’t given values always become undefined, and are always in scope.

  • that undefined can be overwritten. It’s true that undefined isn’t a keyword, but it is read-only and non-configurable. There are other built-ins you probably don’t avoid despite their non-keyword status (Object, Math, NaN…) and practical code usually isn’t written in an actively malicious environment, so this isn’t a good reason to be worried about undefined. (But if you are writing a code generator, feel free to use void 0.)

With how variables work out of the way, it’s time to address the actual question: object properties. There is no reason to ever use typeof for object properties. The earlier exception regarding feature detection doesn’t apply here – typeof only has special behaviour on variables, and expressions that reference object properties are not variables.

This:

if (typeof foo.bar === 'undefined') {
    ⋮
}

is always exactly equivalent to this³:

if (foo.bar === undefined) {
    ⋮
}

and taking into account the advice above, to avoid confusing readers as to why you’re using typeof, because it makes the most sense to use === to check for equality, because it could be refactored to checking a variable’s value later, and because it just plain looks better, you should always use === undefined³ here as well.

Something else to consider when it comes to object properties is whether you really want to check for undefined at all. A given property name can be absent on an object (producing the value undefined when read), present on the object itself with the value undefined, present on the object’s prototype with the value undefined, or present on either of those with a non-undefined value. 'key' in obj will tell you whether a key is anywhere on an object’s prototype chain, and Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, 'key') will tell you whether it’s directly on the object. I won’t go into detail in this answer about prototypes and using objects as string-keyed maps, though, because it’s mostly intended to counter all the bad advice in other answers irrespective of the possible interpretations of the original question. Read up on object prototypes on MDN for more!

¹ unusual choice of example variable name? this is real dead code from the NoScript extension for Firefox.
² don’t assume that not knowing what’s in scope is okay in general, though. bonus vulnerability caused by abuse of dynamic scope: Project Zero 1225
³ once again assuming an ES5+ environment and that undefined refers to the undefined property of the global object.

8
  • 1
    Any non-default context can also overwrite, say, Math, or Object, or setTimeout, or literally anything that you expect to find in the global scope by default.
    – CherryDT
    Mar 17, 2020 at 21:21
  • ohw kay foo !== void 0 works and is shorter guess i can use that :3 and i knew you were referring to yer own answer when ya commented that >:D
    – Fuseteam
    Jul 29, 2020 at 23:54
  • now it doesn't document what it does tho and might be confusing to read so instead i'll make a function isDefined return true if is not void 0 and false if it is and return that instead >:3
    – Fuseteam
    Jul 30, 2020 at 0:02
  • @Fuseteam: Use !== undefined. Actually, I should probably remove the advice about void 0.
    – Ry-
    Jul 30, 2020 at 0:18
  • @Fuseteam: It’s not as readable and has no practical advantages over undefined.
    – Ry-
    Jul 30, 2020 at 18:41
175

In JavaScript there is null and there is undefined. They have different meanings.

  • undefined means that the variable value has not been defined; it is not known what the value is.
  • null means that the variable value is defined and set to null (has no value).

Marijn Haverbeke states, in his free, online book "Eloquent JavaScript" (emphasis mine):

There is also a similar value, null, whose meaning is 'this value is defined, but it does not have a value'. The difference in meaning between undefined and null is mostly academic, and usually not very interesting. In practical programs, it is often necessary to check whether something 'has a value'. In these cases, the expression something == undefined may be used, because, even though they are not exactly the same value, null == undefined will produce true.

So, I guess the best way to check if something was undefined would be:

if (something == undefined)

Object properties should work the same way.

var person = {
    name: "John",
    age: 28,
    sex: "male"
};

alert(person.name); // "John"
alert(person.fakeVariable); // undefined
6
  • 46
    if (something == undefined) is better written as if (something === undefined) Nov 30, 2009 at 9:47
  • 61
    It should be pointed out that this is not entirely safe. undefined is just a variable that can be re-assigned by the user: writing undefined = 'a'; will cause your code to no longer do what you think it does. Using typeof is better and also works for variables (not just properties) that haven't been declared. Apr 14, 2010 at 15:18
  • 7
    if something is an undefined global variable, (something == undefined) brings up javascript error. Apr 21, 2010 at 3:04
  • 8
    The problem with this is that if var a = null then a == undefined evaluates to true, even though a is most certainly defined.
    – Andrew
    May 19, 2011 at 18:50
  • 7
    This interpretation of the "Eloquent Javascript" comment is backward. If you really do just want to check for undefined, the suggested code will not work (it will also detect the condition defined but no value has been assined yet [i.e.null]).a null value. The suggested code "if (something == undefined) ..." checks for both undefined and null (no value set), i.e. it's interpreted as "if ((something is undefined) OR (something is null)) ..." What the author is saying is that often what you really want is to check for both undefined and null. May 17, 2012 at 22:35
137

What does this mean: "undefined object property"?

Actually it can mean two quite different things! First, it can mean the property that has never been defined in the object and, second, it can mean the property that has an undefined value. Let's look at this code:

var o = { a: undefined }

Is o.a undefined? Yes! Its value is undefined. Is o.b undefined? Sure! There is no property 'b' at all! OK, see now how different approaches behave in both situations:

typeof o.a == 'undefined' // true
typeof o.b == 'undefined' // true
o.a === undefined // true
o.b === undefined // true
'a' in o // true
'b' in o // false

We can clearly see that typeof obj.prop == 'undefined' and obj.prop === undefined are equivalent, and they do not distinguish those different situations. And 'prop' in obj can detect the situation when a property hasn't been defined at all and doesn't pay attention to the property value which may be undefined.

So what to do?

1) You want to know if a property is undefined by either the first or second meaning (the most typical situation).

obj.prop === undefined // IMHO, see "final fight" below

2) You want to just know if object has some property and don't care about its value.

'prop' in obj

Notes:

  • You can't check an object and its property at the same time. For example, this x.a === undefined or this typeof x.a == 'undefined' raises ReferenceError: x is not defined if x is not defined.
  • Variable undefined is a global variable (so actually it is window.undefined in browsers). It has been supported since ECMAScript 1st Edition and since ECMAScript 5 it is read only. So in modern browsers it can't be redefined to true as many authors love to frighten us with, but this is still a true for older browsers.

Final fight: obj.prop === undefined vs typeof obj.prop == 'undefined'

Pluses of obj.prop === undefined:

  • It's a bit shorter and looks a bit prettier
  • The JavaScript engine will give you an error if you have misspelled undefined

Minuses of obj.prop === undefined:

  • undefined can be overridden in old browsers

Pluses of typeof obj.prop == 'undefined':

  • It is really universal! It works in new and old browsers.

Minuses of typeof obj.prop == 'undefined':

  • 'undefned' (misspelled) here is just a string constant, so the JavaScript engine can't help you if you have misspelled it like I just did.

Update (for server-side JavaScript):

Node.js supports the global variable undefined as global.undefined (it can also be used without the 'global' prefix). I don't know about other implementations of server-side JavaScript.

5
  • @Bergi thank you for your comment. I have corrected my answer. In my defense I can say that currently (as of v.0.10.18) official Node.js documentation says nothing about undefined as a member of global. Also neither console.log(global); nor for (var key in global) { ... } doesn't show undefined as a member of global. But test like 'undefined' in global show the opposite. Sep 11, 2013 at 10:53
  • 4
    It didn't need extra documentation since it's in the EcmaScript spec, which also says that [[Enumerable]] is false :-)
    – Bergi
    Sep 11, 2013 at 11:00
  • 5
    Regarding Minuses of typeof obj.prop == 'undefined', this can be avoided by writing as typeof obj.prop == typeof undefined. This also gives a very nice symmetry.
    – hlovdal
    Oct 24, 2014 at 11:01
  • 3
    @hlovdal: That’s totally pointless vs. obj.prop === undefined.
    – Ry-
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:38
  • 2
    When we are true to the question headline Detecting an undefined property“, not true to the (different and much easier) question in the first sentence („check if undefined...“), you answer if ('foo' in o)… your answer is truly the first correct answer here. Pretty much everybody else just answers that sentence.
    – Frank N
    Jun 11, 2018 at 8:46
75

The issue boils down to three cases:

  1. The object has the property and its value is not undefined.
  2. The object has the property and its value is undefined.
  3. The object does not have the property.

This tells us something I consider important:

There is a difference between an undefined member and a defined member with an undefined value.

But unhappily typeof obj.foo does not tell us which of the three cases we have. However we can combine this with "foo" in obj to distinguish the cases.

                               |  typeof obj.x === 'undefined' | !("x" in obj)
1.                     { x:1 } |  false                        | false
2.    { x : (function(){})() } |  true                         | false
3.                          {} |  true                         | true

Its worth noting that these tests are the same for null entries too

                               |  typeof obj.x === 'undefined' | !("x" in obj)
                    { x:null } |  false                        | false

I'd argue that in some cases it makes more sense (and is clearer) to check whether the property is there, than checking whether it is undefined, and the only case where this check will be different is case 2, the rare case of an actual entry in the object with an undefined value.

For example: I've just been refactoring a bunch of code that had a bunch of checks whether an object had a given property.

if( typeof blob.x != 'undefined' ) {  fn(blob.x); }

Which was clearer when written without a check for undefined.

if( "x" in blob ) { fn(blob.x); }

But as has been mentioned these are not exactly the same (but are more than good enough for my needs).

6
  • 10
    Hi Michael. Great suggestion, and I think it does make things cleaner. One gotcha that I found, however, is when using the ! operator with "in". You have to say if (!("x" in blob)) {} with brackets around the in, because the ! operator has precedence over 'in'. Hope that helps someone.
    – Simon E.
    Jun 15, 2011 at 0:28
  • Sorry Michael, but this is incorrect, or at least misleading, in light of the original question. 'in' is not a sufficient way to test whether an object property has typeof undefined. For proof, please see this fiddle: jsfiddle.net/CsLKJ/4
    – tex
    Feb 25, 2012 at 12:04
  • 2
    Those two code parts do a different thing! Consider and object given by a = {b: undefined}; then typeof a.b === typeof a.c === 'undefined' but 'b' in a and !('c' in a).
    – mgol
    Sep 27, 2012 at 14:07
  • 3
    +1. The OP doesn't make it clear whether the property exists and has the value undefined, or whether the property itself is undefined (i.e. doesn't exist).
    – RobG
    Apr 1, 2014 at 1:12
  • I would suggest changing point (2.) in your first table to { x : undefined } or at least add it as another alternative to (2.) in the table - I had to think for a moment to realize that point (2.) evaluates to undefined (although you mention that later on).
    – mucaho
    May 14, 2015 at 16:32
48
if ( typeof( something ) == "undefined") 

This worked for me while the others didn't.

6
  • 50
    parens are unnecessary since typeof is an operator
    – aehlke
    Aug 10, 2010 at 11:22
  • 13
    But they make it clearer what is being checked. Otherwise it might be read as typeof (something == "undefined"). Sep 6, 2012 at 0:28
  • If you need the parentheses, then you should learn operator precedence in JS: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
    – Ian
    Mar 7, 2014 at 17:17
  • 12
    Parenthesis are useful precisely because you do NOT need to learn operator precedence in JS, nor do you need to speculate whether future maintenance programmers will need to learn operator precedence in JS.
    – DaveWalley
    Apr 11, 2014 at 14:48
  • 31
    Parenthesis are useful to clarify things. But in this case they just make the operator look like a function. No doubt this clarifies the intent of the programmer. But if you're unsure about operator precedence you should rather write it as (typeof something) === "undefined".
    – Robert
    May 14, 2014 at 18:31
44

I'm not sure where the origin of using === with typeof came from, and as a convention I see it used in many libraries, but the typeof operator returns a string literal, and we know that up front, so why would you also want to type check it too?

typeof x;                      // some string literal "string", "object", "undefined"
if (typeof x === "string") {   // === is redundant because we already know typeof returns a string literal
if (typeof x == "string") {    // sufficient
6
  • Great point Eric. Is there a performance hit from checking type also?
    – Simon E.
    Jun 29, 2011 at 7:16
  • 6
    @Simon: quite the contrary - one could expect slight performance hit from avoiding coercion in '===' case. Quick and dirty test has shown '===' is 5% faster than '==' under FF5.0.1 Dec 18, 2011 at 8:24
  • 6
    More thorough test has shown that under FF,IE and Chrome '==' is more or less faster than '===' (5-10%) and Opera doesn't make any difference at all: jsperf.com/triple-equals-vs-twice-equals/6 Dec 18, 2011 at 9:55
  • 4
    Using == still requires at least a type check - the interpreter can't compare the two operands without knowing their type first.
    – Alnitak
    Aug 13, 2012 at 15:12
  • 8
    == is one less character than === :)
    – svidgen
    Jun 28, 2013 at 14:54
32

I didn't see (hope I didn't miss it) anyone checking the object before the property. So, this is the shortest and most effective (though not necessarily the most clear):

if (obj && obj.prop) {
  // Do something;
}

If the obj or obj.prop is undefined, null, or "falsy", the if statement will not execute the code block. This is usually the desired behavior in most code block statements (in JavaScript).

UPDATE: (7/2/2021)

The latest version of JavaScript introduces a new operator for optional chaining: ?.

This is probably going to be the most explicit and efficient method of checking for the existence of object properties, moving forward.

Ref: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Optional_chaining

4
  • 2
    If you want to know why this works: Javascript: Logical Operators and truthy / falsy
    – mb21
    Feb 4, 2013 at 16:57
  • if you want to assign the property to a variable if it's defined, not null and not falsey, else use some default value, you can use: var x = obj && obj.prop || 'default'; Nov 1, 2015 at 2:27
  • I believe the question is for checking against undefined explicitly. Your condition check against all false values of JS. Jul 20, 2018 at 9:49
  • Don't do this, it fails if obj.prop is false, 0, "" and various other falsey values. This is exactly what we should not do and also applies to optional chaining, which should not be used in this manner.
    – Seth
    Apr 29, 2022 at 0:11
27

Crossposting my answer from related question How can I check for "undefined" in JavaScript?.

Specific to this question, see test cases with someObject.<whatever>.


Some scenarios illustrating the results of the various answers: http://jsfiddle.net/drzaus/UVjM4/

(Note that the use of var for in tests make a difference when in a scoped wrapper)

Code for reference:

(function(undefined) {
    var definedButNotInitialized;
    definedAndInitialized = 3;
    someObject = {
        firstProp: "1"
        , secondProp: false
        // , undefinedProp not defined
    }
    // var notDefined;

    var tests = [
        'definedButNotInitialized in window',
        'definedAndInitialized in window',
        'someObject.firstProp in window',
        'someObject.secondProp in window',
        'someObject.undefinedProp in window',
        'notDefined in window',

        '"definedButNotInitialized" in window',
        '"definedAndInitialized" in window',
        '"someObject.firstProp" in window',
        '"someObject.secondProp" in window',
        '"someObject.undefinedProp" in window',
        '"notDefined" in window',

        'typeof definedButNotInitialized == "undefined"',
        'typeof definedButNotInitialized === typeof undefined',
        'definedButNotInitialized === undefined',
        '! definedButNotInitialized',
        '!! definedButNotInitialized',

        'typeof definedAndInitialized == "undefined"',
        'typeof definedAndInitialized === typeof undefined',
        'definedAndInitialized === undefined',
        '! definedAndInitialized',
        '!! definedAndInitialized',

        'typeof someObject.firstProp == "undefined"',
        'typeof someObject.firstProp === typeof undefined',
        'someObject.firstProp === undefined',
        '! someObject.firstProp',
        '!! someObject.firstProp',

        'typeof someObject.secondProp == "undefined"',
        'typeof someObject.secondProp === typeof undefined',
        'someObject.secondProp === undefined',
        '! someObject.secondProp',
        '!! someObject.secondProp',

        'typeof someObject.undefinedProp == "undefined"',
        'typeof someObject.undefinedProp === typeof undefined',
        'someObject.undefinedProp === undefined',
        '! someObject.undefinedProp',
        '!! someObject.undefinedProp',

        'typeof notDefined == "undefined"',
        'typeof notDefined === typeof undefined',
        'notDefined === undefined',
        '! notDefined',
        '!! notDefined'
    ];

    var output = document.getElementById('results');
    var result = '';
    for(var t in tests) {
        if( !tests.hasOwnProperty(t) ) continue; // bleh

        try {
            result = eval(tests[t]);
        } catch(ex) {
            result = 'Exception--' + ex;
        }
        console.log(tests[t], result);
        output.innerHTML += "\n" + tests[t] + ": " + result;
    }
})();

And results:

definedButNotInitialized in window: true
definedAndInitialized in window: false
someObject.firstProp in window: false
someObject.secondProp in window: false
someObject.undefinedProp in window: true
notDefined in window: Exception--ReferenceError: notDefined is not defined
"definedButNotInitialized" in window: false
"definedAndInitialized" in window: true
"someObject.firstProp" in window: false
"someObject.secondProp" in window: false
"someObject.undefinedProp" in window: false
"notDefined" in window: false
typeof definedButNotInitialized == "undefined": true
typeof definedButNotInitialized === typeof undefined: true
definedButNotInitialized === undefined: true
! definedButNotInitialized: true
!! definedButNotInitialized: false
typeof definedAndInitialized == "undefined": false
typeof definedAndInitialized === typeof undefined: false
definedAndInitialized === undefined: false
! definedAndInitialized: false
!! definedAndInitialized: true
typeof someObject.firstProp == "undefined": false
typeof someObject.firstProp === typeof undefined: false
someObject.firstProp === undefined: false
! someObject.firstProp: false
!! someObject.firstProp: true
typeof someObject.secondProp == "undefined": false
typeof someObject.secondProp === typeof undefined: false
someObject.secondProp === undefined: false
! someObject.secondProp: true
!! someObject.secondProp: false
typeof someObject.undefinedProp == "undefined": true
typeof someObject.undefinedProp === typeof undefined: true
someObject.undefinedProp === undefined: true
! someObject.undefinedProp: true
!! someObject.undefinedProp: false
typeof notDefined == "undefined": true
typeof notDefined === typeof undefined: true
notDefined === undefined: Exception--ReferenceError: notDefined is not defined
! notDefined: Exception--ReferenceError: notDefined is not defined
!! notDefined: Exception--ReferenceError: notDefined is not defined
21

If you do

if (myvar == undefined )
{ 
    alert('var does not exists or is not initialized');
}

it will fail when the variable myvar does not exists, because myvar is not defined, so the script is broken and the test has no effect.

Because the window object has a global scope (default object) outside a function, a declaration will be 'attached' to the window object.

For example:

var myvar = 'test';

The global variable myvar is the same as window.myvar or window['myvar']

To avoid errors to test when a global variable exists, you better use:

if(window.myvar == undefined )
{ 
    alert('var does not exists or is not initialized');
}

The question if a variable really exists doesn't matter, its value is incorrect. Otherwise, it is silly to initialize variables with undefined, and it is better use the value false to initialize. When you know that all variables that you declare are initialized with false, you can simply check its type or rely on !window.myvar to check if it has a proper/valid value. So even when the variable is not defined then !window.myvar is the same for myvar = undefined or myvar = false or myvar = 0.

When you expect a specific type, test the type of the variable. To speed up testing a condition you better do:

if( !window.myvar || typeof window.myvar != 'string' )
{
    alert('var does not exists or is not type of string');
}

When the first and simple condition is true, the interpreter skips the next tests.

It is always better to use the instance/object of the variable to check if it got a valid value. It is more stable and is a better way of programming.

(y)

16

ECMAScript 10 introduced a new feature - optional chaining which you can use to use a property of an object only when an object is defined like this:

const userPhone = user?.contactDetails?.phone;

It will reference to the phone property only when user and contactDetails are defined.

Ref. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Optional_chaining

2
  • I used to use a lot the function get from lodash, very convenient for accessing this kind of objects, but the new optional chaining covers up most of the uses of _.get
    – Al Hill
    Jun 5, 2020 at 16:17
  • This is the answer to the question. Mar 23, 2022 at 15:42
15

In the article Exploring the Abyss of Null and Undefined in JavaScript I read that frameworks like Underscore.js use this function:

function isUndefined(obj){
    return obj === void 0;
}
3
  • 3
    void 0 is just a short way of writing undefined (since that's what void followed by any expression returns), it saves 3 charcters. It could also do var a; return obj === a;, but that's one more character. :-)
    – RobG
    Apr 1, 2014 at 1:16
  • 2
    void is a reserved word, whereas undefined is not i.e. while undefined is equal to void 0 by default, you can assign a value to undefined e.g. undefined = 1234. Sep 14, 2015 at 13:08
  • isUndefined(obj): 16 chars. obj === void 0: 14 chars. 'nough said. Nov 1, 2015 at 2:41
15

Simply anything is not defined in JavaScript, is undefined, doesn't matter if it's a property inside an Object/Array or as just a simple variable...

JavaScript has typeof which make it very easy to detect an undefined variable.

Simply check if typeof whatever === 'undefined' and it will return a boolean.

That's how the famous function isUndefined() in AngularJs v.1x is written:

function isUndefined(value) {return typeof value === 'undefined';} 

So as you see the function receive a value, if that value is defined, it will return false, otherwise for undefined values, return true.

So let's have a look what gonna be the results when we passing values, including object properties like below, this is the list of variables we have:

var stackoverflow = {};
stackoverflow.javascipt = 'javascript';
var today;
var self = this;
var num = 8;
var list = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
var y = null;

and we check them as below, you can see the results in front of them as a comment:

isUndefined(stackoverflow); //false
isUndefined(stackoverflow.javascipt); //false
isUndefined(today); //true
isUndefined(self); //false
isUndefined(num); //false
isUndefined(list); //false
isUndefined(y); //false
isUndefined(stackoverflow.java); //true
isUndefined(stackoverflow.php); //true
isUndefined(stackoverflow && stackoverflow.css); //true

As you see we can check anything with using something like this in our code, as mentioned you can simply use typeof in your code, but if you are using it over and over, create a function like the angular sample which I share and keep reusing as following DRY code pattern.

Also one more thing, for checking property on an object in a real application which you not sure even the object exists or not, check if the object exists first.

If you check a property on an object and the object doesn't exist, will throw an error and stop the whole application running.

isUndefined(x.css);
VM808:2 Uncaught ReferenceError: x is not defined(…)

So simple you can wrap inside an if statement like below:

if(typeof x !== 'undefined') {
  //do something
}

Which also equal to isDefined in Angular 1.x...

function isDefined(value) {return typeof value !== 'undefined';}

Also other javascript frameworks like underscore has similar defining check, but I recommend you use typeof if you already not using any frameworks.

I also add this section from MDN which has got useful information about typeof, undefined and void(0).

Strict equality and undefined
You can use undefined and the strict equality and inequality operators to determine whether a variable has a value. In the following code, the variable x is not defined, and the if statement evaluates to true.

var x;
if (x === undefined) {
   // these statements execute
}
else {
   // these statements do not execute
}

Note: The strict equality operator rather than the standard equality operator must be used here, because x == undefined also checks whether x is null, while strict equality doesn't. null is not equivalent to undefined. See comparison operators for details.


Typeof operator and undefined
Alternatively, typeof can be used:

var x;
if (typeof x === 'undefined') {
   // these statements execute
}

One reason to use typeof is that it does not throw an error if the variable has not been declared.

// x has not been declared before
if (typeof x === 'undefined') { // evaluates to true without errors
   // these statements execute
}

if (x === undefined) { // throws a ReferenceError

}

However, this kind of technique should be avoided. JavaScript is a statically scoped language, so knowing if a variable is declared can be read by seeing whether it is declared in an enclosing context. The only exception is the global scope, but the global scope is bound to the global object, so checking the existence of a variable in the global context can be done by checking the existence of a property on the global object (using the in operator, for instance).


Void operator and undefined

The void operator is a third alternative.

var x;
if (x === void 0) {
   // these statements execute
}

// y has not been declared before
if (y === void 0) {
   // throws a ReferenceError (in contrast to `typeof`)
}

more > here

0
13
"propertyName" in obj //-> true | false
13

'if (window.x) { }' is error safe

Most likely you want if (window.x). This check is safe even if x hasn't been declared (var x;) - browser doesn't throw an error.

Example: I want to know if my browser supports History API

if (window.history) {
    history.call_some_function();
}

How this works:

window is an object which holds all global variables as its members, and it is legal to try to access a non-existing member. If x hasn't been declared or hasn't been set then window.x returns undefined. undefined leads to false when if() evaluates it.

1
  • But what if you run in Node? typeof history != 'undefined' actually works in both systems. Nov 1, 2015 at 2:28
13

Reading through this, I'm amazed I didn't see this. I have found multiple algorithms that would work for this.

Never Defined

If the value of an object was never defined, this will prevent from returning true if it is defined as null or undefined. This is helpful if you want true to be returned for values set as undefined

if(obj.prop === void 0) console.log("The value has never been defined");

Defined as undefined Or never Defined

If you want it to result as true for values defined with the value of undefined, or never defined, you can simply use === undefined

if(obj.prop === undefined) console.log("The value is defined as undefined, or never defined");

Defined as a falsy value, undefined,null, or never defined.

Commonly, people have asked me for an algorithm to figure out if a value is either falsy, undefined, or null. The following works.

if(obj.prop == false || obj.prop === null || obj.prop === undefined) {
    console.log("The value is falsy, null, or undefined");
}
4
  • 4
    I think you can replace the last example with if (!obj.prop) Nov 1, 2015 at 2:24
  • @StijndeWitt, you can, I was pretty inexperienced when I wrote this, and my English seems to have been equally bad, nevertheless, there isn't anything incorrect in the answer
    – Travis
    Apr 7, 2017 at 14:31
  • 3
    var obj = {foo: undefined}; obj.foo === void 0 -> true. How is that "never defined as undefined"? This is wrong. Jun 15, 2017 at 18:40
  • @PatrickRoberts You're right. When I wrote this answer in February 2015 (before ES6) the first option I outlined did indeed work, but it is now outdated.
    – Travis
    May 14, 2020 at 22:31
12

The solution is incorrect. In JavaScript,

null == undefined

will return true, because they both are "casted" to a boolean and are false. The correct way would be to check

if (something === undefined)

which is the identity operator...

3
  • 3
    To be clear, === is type equality + (primitive equality | object identity), where primitives include strings. I think most people consider 'abab'.slice(0,2) === 'abab'.slice(2) unintuitive if one considers === as the identity operator.
    – clacke
    Jul 30, 2010 at 8:49
  • 1
    Wrong. This throws an error if the variable has not been created. Should not be voted up. Use typeof instead.
    – Simon E.
    Jun 15, 2011 at 0:22
  • What solution? Can you link directly to it? Jul 24, 2020 at 23:34
10

Compare with void 0, for terseness.

if (foo !== void 0)

It's not as verbose as if (typeof foo !== 'undefined')

3
  • 3
    But it will throw a ReferenceError if foo is undeclared.
    – daniel1426
    Mar 7, 2014 at 22:46
  • 1
    @daniel1426: So if there's an error in your code, you want to hide it instead of fixing it? Not a great approach, IMO.
    – user8897421
    Dec 18, 2017 at 13:47
  • This is not used to hide errors. It's the common way to detect the properties of the environment to define polyfills. For instance: if( typeof Promise === 'undefined' ){ /* define Promise */ }
    – gaperton
    Oct 4, 2018 at 3:05
10

You can get an array all undefined with path using the following code.

 function getAllUndefined(object) {

        function convertPath(arr, key) {
            var path = "";
            for (var i = 1; i < arr.length; i++) {

                path += arr[i] + "->";
            }
            path += key;
            return path;
        }


        var stack = [];
        var saveUndefined= [];
        function getUndefiend(obj, key) {

            var t = typeof obj;
            switch (t) {
                case "object":
                    if (t === null) {
                        return false;
                    }
                    break;
                case "string":
                case "number":
                case "boolean":
                case "null":
                    return false;
                default:
                    return true;
            }
            stack.push(key);
            for (k in obj) {
                if (obj.hasOwnProperty(k)) {
                    v = getUndefiend(obj[k], k);
                    if (v) {
                        saveUndefined.push(convertPath(stack, k));
                    }
                }
            }
            stack.pop();

        }

        getUndefiend({
            "": object
        }, "");
        return saveUndefined;
    }

jsFiddle link

1
  • While it won't affect the validity of your code, you've got a typo: getUndefiend should be getUndefined.
    – icktoofay
    May 14, 2013 at 3:02
9

There is a nice and elegant way to assign a defined property to a new variable if it is defined or assign a default value to it as a fallback if it’s undefined.

var a = obj.prop || defaultValue;

It’s suitable if you have a function, which receives an additional configuration property:

var yourFunction = function(config){

   this.config = config || {};
   this.yourConfigValue = config.yourConfigValue || 1;
   console.log(this.yourConfigValue);
}

Now executing

yourFunction({yourConfigValue:2});
//=> 2

yourFunction();
//=> 1

yourFunction({otherProperty:5});
//=> 1
1
  • Using || (OR) will use type coertion for "undefined" and "null" values to false, and every other values to "true". ------- If property checked (in example "obj.prop" and "config") is undefined or null it will be assigned 'default value'. In any other the value will not be changed. -------- This soultion doesn't check if the object HAS property defined. ------------------------------------------------ To check if object has a property you can use: let objAndPropCheck = (obj || { }).prop || 0; Mar 4, 2022 at 0:44
8

Here is my situation:

I am using the result of a REST call. The result should be parsed from JSON to a JavaScript object.

There is one error I need to defend. If the arguments to the REST call were incorrect as far as the user specifying the arguments wrong, the REST call comes back basically empty.

While using this post to help me defend against this, I tried this:

if( typeof restResult.data[0] === "undefined" ) { throw  "Some error"; }

For my situation, if restResult.data[0] === "object", then I can safely start inspecting the rest of the members. If undefined then throw the error as above.

What I am saying is that for my situation, all the previous suggestions in this post did not work. I'm not saying I'm right and everyone is wrong. I am not a JavaScript master at all, but hopefully this will help someone.

2
  • Your typeof guard doesn't actually guard against anything that a direct comparison couldn't handle. If restResult is undefined or undeclared, it'll still throw.
    – user8897421
    Dec 18, 2017 at 13:50
  • In your case you could more simply check if the array is empty: if(!restResult.data.length) { throw "Some error"; }
    – Headbank
    Feb 28, 2019 at 15:36
7

All the answers are incomplete. This is the right way of knowing that there is a property 'defined as undefined':

var hasUndefinedProperty = function hasUndefinedProperty(obj, prop){
  return ((prop in obj) && (typeof obj[prop] == 'undefined'));
};

Example:

var a = { b : 1, e : null };
a.c = a.d;

hasUndefinedProperty(a, 'b'); // false: b is defined as 1
hasUndefinedProperty(a, 'c'); // true: c is defined as undefined
hasUndefinedProperty(a, 'd'); // false: d is undefined
hasUndefinedProperty(a, 'e'); // false: e is defined as null

// And now...
delete a.c ;
hasUndefinedProperty(a, 'c'); // false: c is undefined

Too bad that this been the right answer and is buried in wrong answers >_<

So, for anyone who pass by, I will give you undefined's for free!!

var undefined ; undefined ; // undefined
({}).a ;                    // undefined
[].a ;                      // undefined
''.a ;                      // undefined
(function(){}()) ;          // undefined
void(0) ;                   // undefined
eval() ;                    // undefined
1..a ;                      // undefined
/a/.a ;                     // undefined
(true).a ;                  // undefined
7

There is a very easy and simple way.

You can use optional chaining:

x = {prop:{name:"sajad"}}

console.log(x.prop?.name) // Output is: "sajad"
console.log(x.prop?.lastName) // Output is: undefined

or

if(x.prop?.lastName) // The result of this 'if' statement is false and is not throwing an error

You can use optional chaining even for functions or arrays.

As of mid-2020 this is not universally implemented. Check the documentation at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Optional_chaining

0
6

Going through the comments, for those who want to check both is it undefined or its value is null:

//Just in JavaScript
var s; // Undefined
if (typeof s == "undefined" || s === null){
    alert('either it is undefined or value is null')
}

If you are using jQuery Library then jQuery.isEmptyObject() will suffice for both cases,

var s; // Undefined
jQuery.isEmptyObject(s); // Will return true;

s = null; // Defined as null
jQuery.isEmptyObject(s); // Will return true;

//Usage
if (jQuery.isEmptyObject(s)) {
    alert('Either variable:s is undefined or its value is null');
} else {
     alert('variable:s has value ' + s);
}

s = 'something'; // Defined with some value
jQuery.isEmptyObject(s); // Will return false;
1
  • jQuery will also take care of any cross-browser compatibility issues with the different JavaScript APIs. Dec 9, 2014 at 22:12
6

If you are using Angular:

angular.isUndefined(obj)
angular.isUndefined(obj.prop)

Underscore.js:

_.isUndefined(obj) 
_.isUndefined(obj.prop) 
1
  • 2
    How do I add 1 to variable x? Do I need Underscore or jQuery? (amazing that people will use libraries for even the most elementary operations such as a typeof check) Nov 1, 2015 at 2:43
6

I provide three ways here for those who expect weird answers:

function isUndefined1(val) {
    try {
        val.a;
    } catch (e) {
        return /undefined/.test(e.message);
    }
    return false;
}

function isUndefined2(val) {
    return !val && val+'' === 'undefined';
}

function isUndefined3(val) {
    const defaultVal = {};
    return ((input = defaultVal) => input === defaultVal)(val);
}

function test(func){
    console.group(`test start :`+func.name);
    console.log(func(undefined));
    console.log(func(null));
    console.log(func(1));
    console.log(func("1"));
    console.log(func(0));
    console.log(func({}));
    console.log(func(function () { }));
    console.groupEnd();
}
test(isUndefined1);
test(isUndefined2);
test(isUndefined3);

isUndefined1:

Try to get a property of the input value, and check the error message if it exists. If the input value is undefined, the error message would be Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'b' of undefined.

isUndefined2:

Convert the input value to a string to compare with "undefined" and ensure it's a negative value.

isUndefined3:

In JavaScript, an optional parameter works when the input value is exactly undefined.

0
5

I use if (this.variable) to test if it is defined. A simple if (variable), recommended in a previous answer, fails for me.

It turns out that it works only when a variable is a field of some object, obj.someField to check if it is defined in the dictionary. But we can use this or window as the dictionary object since any variable is a field in the current window, as I understand it. Therefore here is a test:

if (this.abc) 
    alert("defined"); 
else 
    alert("undefined");

abc = "abc";
if (this.abc) 
    alert("defined"); 
else 
    alert("undefined");

It first detects that variable abc is undefined and it is defined after initialization.

4
function isUnset(inp) {
  return (typeof inp === 'undefined')
}

Returns false if variable is set, and true if is undefined.

Then use:

if (isUnset(var)) {
  // initialize variable here
}
1
  • 5
    No. Don't do this. It only takes a very simple test to prove that you cannot meaningfully wrap a typeof test in a function. Amazing that 4 people upvoted this. -1. Nov 1, 2015 at 2:39
4

I would like to show you something I'm using in order to protect the undefined variable:

Object.defineProperty(window, 'undefined', {});

This forbids anyone to change the window.undefined value therefore destroying the code based on that variable. If using "use strict", anything trying to change its value will end in error, otherwise it would be silently ignored.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.