console.log(true+true); //2
console.log(typeof(true+true)); //number
console.log(isNaN(true+true)); //false
Why is adding together 2 boolean types yielding a number? I kind of understand that if they didn't equal (1/0 (binary?)) it would be awkward to try to perform arithmetic on a boolean type, but I can't find the reasoning behind this logic.
Number(true) + Number(true) === 2
true
is 1 when auto-converted to a number. Javascript's dynamic type system in action.