I'm fiddling around with bitwise operators in JavaScript and there is one thing I find remarkable.
The bitwise or operator returns 1 as output bit if one of the two input bits are 1. So doing x | 0 always returns x, because | 0 has no effect:
( 1 | 0 ) === 1( 0 | 0 ) === 0
However, when I calculated Infinity | 0, I got 0. This is surprising in my opinion, because by the above one should get Infinity. After all, ( x | 0 ) === x.
I cannot find where in the ECMAscript specification this is explicitly defined, so I was wondering what exactly implies that ( Infinity | 0 ) === 0. Is is perhaps the way Infinity is stored in memory? If so, how can it still be that doing a | 0 operation causes it to return 0 whereas | 0 should not do anything?
(infinity | 0)? Infinity is... infinite, it can't be computed by its very definition... :| – Albireo Jul 11 '11 at 12:31Infinityappears to be a truthy value when you use it in an if-else statement, like one would expect. I just confirmed this: jsfiddle.net/LWBVd. Perhaps it has to do with the internal representation ofInfinity. – FishBasketGordo Jul 11 '11 at 12:360.1is truthy,0.1 | 0is falsy. – pimvdb Jul 11 '11 at 12:39