137

While [] + [] is an empty string, [] + {} is "[object Object]", and {} + [] is 0. Why is {} + {} NaN?

> {} + {}
  NaN

My question isn't why ({} + {}).toString() is "[object Object][object Object]" while NaN.toString() is "NaN", this part has an answer here already.

My question is why does this happen only on the client side? On the server side (Node.js) {} + {} is "[object Object][object Object]".

> {} + {}
'[object Object][object Object]'

Summarizing:

On the client side:

 [] + []              // Returns ""
 [] + {}              // Returns "[object Object]"
 {} + []              // Returns 0
 {} + {}              // Returns NaN

 NaN.toString()       // Returns "NaN"
 ({} + {}).toString() // Returns "[object Object][object Object]"
 var a = {} + {};     // 'a' will be "[object Object][object Object]"

In Node.js:

 [] + []   // Returns "" (like on the client)
 [] + {}   // Returns "[object Object]" (like on the client)
 {} + []   // Returns "[object Object]" (not like on the client)
 {} + {}   // Returns "[object Object][object Object]" (not like on the client)
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    It's just the browser console that does that. Try logging to the console and it's the same as in NodeJS. jsbin.com/oveyuj/1/edit
    – elclanrs
    Jun 24, 2013 at 5:29
  • 2
    Not really a duplicate, I am asking for NodeJS answer. Voting for reopen... Jun 24, 2013 at 5:35
  • 4
    Hmm... sorry. However, stackoverflow.com/questions/9032856/… is still relevant and answers the first half Jun 24, 2013 at 5:35
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    Don't forget that {} can be interpreted either as an expression or as an object primitive depending on context. Maybe the code is the same on client and on server but it is interpreting {} differently due to different context of entering the code.
    – Patashu
    Jun 24, 2013 at 5:43
  • 18
    Please reopen and then stop closing this question again and again since this question is really not a duplicate.
    – Alvin Wong
    Jun 24, 2013 at 7:27

1 Answer 1

133

Updated note: this has been fixed in Chrome 49.

Very interesting question! Let's dig in.

The root cause

The root of the difference is in how Node.js evaluates these statements vs. how the Chrome development tools do.

What Node.js does

Node.js uses the repl module for this.

From the Node.js REPL source code:

self.eval(
    '(' + evalCmd + ')',
    self.context,
    'repl',
    function (e, ret) {
        if (e && !isSyntaxError(e))
            return finish(e);
        if (typeof ret === 'function' && /^[\r\n\s]*function/.test(evalCmd) || e) {
            // Now as statement without parens.
            self.eval(evalCmd, self.context, 'repl', finish);
        }
        else {
            finish(null, ret);
        }
    }
);

This acts just like running ({}+{}) in the Chrome developer tools, which also produces "[object Object][object Object]" as you'd expect.

What the chrome developer tools do

On the other hand Chrome dveloper tools does the following:

try {
    if (injectCommandLineAPI && inspectedWindow.console) {
        inspectedWindow.console._commandLineAPI = new CommandLineAPI(this._commandLineAPIImpl, isEvalOnCallFrame ? object : null);
        expression = "with ((window && window.console && window.console._commandLineAPI) || {}) {\n" + expression + "\n}";
    }
    var result = evalFunction.call(object, expression);
    if (objectGroup === "console")
        this._lastResult = result;
    return result;
}
finally {
    if (injectCommandLineAPI && inspectedWindow.console)
        delete inspectedWindow.console._commandLineAPI;
}

So basically, it performs a call on the object with the expression. The expression being:

with ((window && window.console && window.console._commandLineAPI) || {}) {
    {}+{};// <-- This is your code
}

So, as you can see, the expression is being evaluted directly, without the wrapping parenthesis.

Why Node.js acts differently

Node.js's source justifies this:

// This catches '{a : 1}' properly.

Node did not always act like this. Here is the actual commit that changed it. Ryan left the following comment on the change: "Improve how REPL commands are evaled" with an example of the difference.


Rhino

Update - OP was interested in how Rhino behaves (and why it behaves like the Chrome devtools and unlike nodejs).

Rhino uses a completely different JS engine unlike the Chrome developer tools and Node.js's REPL which both use V8.

Here is the basic pipe line of what happens when you eval a JavaScript command with Rhino in the Rhino shell.

Basically:

Script script = cx.compileString(scriptText, "<command>", 1, null);
if (script != null) {
    script.exec(cx, getShellScope()); // <- just an eval
}

Out of the three, Rhino's shell is the one that does the closest thing to an actual eval without any wrapping. Rhino's is the closest to an actual eval() statement and you can expect it to behave exactly like eval would.

14
  • 1
    (Not really a part of the answer, but worth mentioning nodejs uses the vm module for evaling by default when using the REPL, and not just a JavaScript eval) Jun 24, 2013 at 6:43
  • Can you explain why rhino, for example, does the same thing in Terminal (not only Chrome Console)? Jun 26, 2013 at 6:10
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    +10 if it was possible! Wow man,... You really don't have life or you are really smarter than me to know something like that. Please, tell me that you searched a little bit to found this answer :)
    – Samuel
    Jun 28, 2013 at 21:59
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    @Samuel All it took is reading the source - I swear! In Chrome, if you enter 'debugger;' , you get the whole pipe - it will throw you directly to the 'with' with just one function above to evaluateOn. In node, everything is very well documented - they have a dedicated REPL module with all the history nice and cozy on git, having used REPLs before on my own programs, I knew where to look :) I'm glad you liked it and found it helpful, but I owe it to my familiarity with these code bases (dev-tools and nodejs) rather than my intellect. Going straight to the source is often always the easiest. Jun 28, 2013 at 22:08
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    Update - the console API in Chrome has been updated a bit so while the general idea here is correct, the code posted is not accurate for the most recent version of Chrome. See chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/blink.git/+/master/Source/… May 25, 2014 at 23:37

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