They are not equivalent. The main difference is that setting
a.x = undefined
means that a.hasOwnProperty("x")
will still return true, and therefore, it will still show up in a for in
loop, and in Object.keys()
. Whereas
delete a.x
means that a.hasOwnProperty("x")
will return false
You can't tell if a property exists by testing
if (a.x === undefined)
If you are trying to determine if a property exists, you should always use
// If you want inherited properties
if ('x' in a)
// If you don't want inherited properties
if (a.hasOwnProperty('x'))
Following the prototype chain (mentioned by zzzzBov) Calling delete
will allow it to go up the prototype chain, whereas setting the value to undefined will not look for the property in the chained prototypes
var obj = {
x: "fromPrototype"
};
var extended = Object.create(obj);
extended.x = "overriding";
console.log(extended.x); // overriding
extended.x = undefined;
console.log(extended.x); // undefined
delete extended.x;
console.log(extended.x); // fromPrototype
Deleting Inherited Properties If the property you are trying to delete is inherited, delete
will not affect it. That is, delete
only deletes properties from the object itself, not inherited properties.
var obj = {x: "fromPrototype"};
var extended = Object.create(obj);
delete extended.x;
console.log(extended.x); // Still fromPrototype
Therefore, if you need to make sure an object's value will be undefined, delete
will not work when the property is inherited, you will have to set (override) it to undefined
in that case. Unless the place that is checking for it will use hasOwnProperty
, but it likely wouldn't be safe to assume that everywhere that checks it will use hasOwnProperty
undefined
as the value, which is still a ..