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What are the values in JavaScript that are 'falsey', meaning that they evaluate as false in expressions like if(value), value ? and !value?


There are some discussions of the purpose of falsey values on Stack Overflow already, but no exhaustive complete answer listing what all the falsey values are.

I couldn't find any complete list on MDN JavaScript Reference, and I was surprised to find that the top results when looking for a complete, authoritative list of falsey values in JavaScript were blog articles, some of which had obvious omissions (for example, NaN), and none of which had a format like Stack Overflow's where comments or alternative answers could be added to point out quirks, surprises, omissions, mistakes or caveats. So, it seemed to make sense to make one.

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4 Answers 4

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Falsey values in JavaScript

  • false
  • Zero of Number type: 0 and also -0, 0.0, and hex form 0x0 (thanks RBT)
  • Zero of BigInt type: 0n and 0x0n (new in 2020, thanks GetMeARemoteJob)
  • "", '' and `` - strings of length 0
  • null
  • undefined
  • NaN
  • document.all (in HTML browsers only)
    • This is a weird one. document.all is a falsey object, with typeof as undefined. It was a Microsoft-proprietory function in IE before IE11, and was added to the HTML spec as a "willful violation of the JavaScript specification" so that sites written for IE wouldn't break on trying to access, for example, document.all.something; it's falsy because if (document.all) used to be a popular way to detect IE, before conditional comments. See Why is document.all falsy? for details

"Falsey" simply means that JavaScript's internal ToBoolean function returns false. ToBoolean underlies !value, value ? ... : ...; and if (value). Here's its official specification (2020 working draft) (the only changes since the very first ECMAscript specification in 1997 are the addition of ES6's Symbols, which are always truthy, and BigInt, mentioned above:

Argument type Result
Undefined Return false.
Null Return false.
Boolean Return argument.
Number If argument is +0, -0, or NaN, return false; otherwise return true.
String If argument is the empty String (its length is zero), return false; otherwise return true.
BigInt If argument is 0n, return false; otherwise return true.
Symbol Return true.
Object Return true.

Comparisons with == (loose equality)

It's worth talking about falsy values' loose comparisons with ==, which uses ToNumber() and can cause some confusion due to the underlying differences. They effectively form three groups:

  • false, 0, -0, "", '' all match each other with ==
    • e.g. false == "", '' == 0 and therefore 4/2 - 2 == 'some string'.slice(11);
  • null, undefined match with ==
    • e.g. null == undefined but undefined != false
    • It's also worth mentioning that while typeof null returns 'object', null is not an object, this is a longstanding bug/quirk that was not fixed in order to maintain compatibility. It's not a true object, and objects are truthy (except for that "wilful violation" document.all when Javascript is implemented in HTML)
  • NaN doesn't match anything, with == or ===, not even itself
    • e.g. NaN != NaN, NaN !== NaN, NaN != false, NaN != null

With "strict equality" (===), there are no such groupings. Only false === false.

This is one of the reasons why many developers and many style guides (e.g. standardjs) prefer === and almost never use ==.


Truthy values that actually == false

"Truthy" simply means that JavaScript's internal ToBoolean function returns true. A quirk of Javascript to be aware of (and another good reason to prefer === over ==): it is possible for a value to be truthy (ToBoolean returns true), but also == false.

You might think if (value && value == false) alert('Huh?') is a logical impossibility that couldn't happen, but it will, for:

  • "0" and '0' - they're non-empty strings, which are truthy, but Javascript's == matches numbers with equivalent strings (e.g. 42 == "42"). Since 0 == false, if "0" == 0, "0" == false.
  • new Number(0) and new Boolean(false) - they're objects, which are truthy, but == sees their values, which == false.
  • 0 .toExponential(); - an object with a numerical value equivalent to 0
  • Any similar constructions that give you a false-equaling value wrapped in a type that is truthy
  • [], [[]] and [0] (thanks cloudfeet for the JavaScript Equality Table link)

Some more truthy values

These are just a few values that some people might expect to be falsey, but are actually truthy.

  • -1 and all non-zero negative numbers

  • ' ', " ", "false", 'null'... all non-empty strings, including strings that are just whitespace

  • Anything from typeof, which always returns a non-empty string, for example:

  • Any object (except that "wilful violation" document.all in browsers). Remember that null isn't really an object, despite typeof suggesting otherwise. Examples:

    • {}
    • []
    • function(){} or () => {} (any function, including empty functions)
    • Error and any instance of Error
    • Any regular expression
    • Anything created with new (including new Number(0) and new Boolean(false))
  • Any Symbol

true, 1, "1" and [1] return true when compared to each other with ==.

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    FYI, what !, if and ?..: have in common is that they call the internal ToBoolean function on the value. How those values behave in the context of !, if, etc. is already implied by their name: They are "falsy" values. I'm a bit afraid that others will read the answer and think "Oh so in this context (!, if, ?...:), the value is false, but with !!, it's true", but don't understand the underlying concept. Two other points: 1) v ? true : false is just a verbose way of !!v. 2) typeof always returns a non-empty string, which is truthy. Nov 7, 2013 at 15:51
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    I.e. there is no point in looking at typeof null or typeof undefined specifically. You could just say that non-empty strings are truthy. Nov 7, 2013 at 15:52
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    I see, but this has nothing to do with the original question ;) Adding too much somewhat related but not relevant information could be rather confusing for readers. Nov 7, 2013 at 15:57
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    I have just learned that document.all is falsy as well.
    – Claudiu
    Feb 26, 2016 at 4:53
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    Regarding loose comparison: because Booleans are converted to numbers, x == false will call ToNumber(x) which is just very different from ToBoolean(x). Might be worth explaining. Also I just noticed that I already commented on this answer ages ago :D Feb 26, 2016 at 13:38
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Don't forget about the non-empty string "false" which evaluates to true

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    …and is therefore not a falsy value, which was asked for?
    – Bergi
    Oct 4, 2017 at 1:23
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    touché. it's a value you might expect to be falsey and isn't, which is still worth being aware of, and I think, merits mention on a comprehensive list
    – MrMcPlad
    Oct 4, 2017 at 21:43
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    Added to the list... but let's not try to turn this into a comprehensive list of all possible truthy values! That'd take a while :-) Dec 7, 2017 at 11:15
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Just to add to @user568458's list of falsy values:

  • In addition to integer number 0, the decimal number 0.0, 0.00 or any such zeroish number is also a falsy value.

    var myNum = 0.0;
    if(myNum){
        console.log('I am a truthy value');
    }
    else {
        console.log('I am a falsy value');
    }
    

    Above code snippet prints I am a falsy value

  • Similarly hex representation of the number 0 is also a falsy value as shown in below code snippet:

    var myNum = 0x0; //hex representation of 0
    if(myNum){
        console.log('I am a truthy value');
    }   
    else {
        console.log('I am a falsy value');
    }
    

    Above code snippet again prints I am a falsy value.

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    JavaScript does not have integer numbers. 0, 0x0, 0.0 and 0.00 are just different literals for the same IEEE-754 64-bit floating point value zero. Nov 24, 2017 at 11:08
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Addition to the topic, as of ES2020 we have a new value which is falsy, it's BigInt zero (0n):

0n == false // true
-0n == false // true
0n === false // false
-0n === false // false

So with this, we now have 7 "falsy" values in total (not including document.all as mentioned by user above since it's part of DOM and not JS).

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    Nice! Thanks, I hadn't heard about that yet, I've added it to the big list with a link crediting your answer for raising it May 2, 2020 at 20:27

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