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I was reading the answer to this question (about the "wat" video) and it said:

  1. {}+[]
    This is interpreted as an empty block of code, unary plus and empty array. First part does nothing, array is converted to a comma-separated string of it's elements (empty string for empty array), then to a number (empty string is converted to 0), hence 0.

I am currently learning JS from "The Definitive Guide" so I try to really understand things like that.

My question is, when does JS decide to interpret {} as an empty block of code, instead of an empty object?

Also, there are some inconsistencies between Node.js and Firebug which I would like to understand.

Firebug:

Firebug console output for <code>{}[]</code> and <code>({}[])</code>

Node.js:

Node.js output for <code>{}[]</code> and <code>({}[])</code>

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  • 1
    I don't think this is a duplicate, in that it explicitly references the other question and asks about a detail.
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:35
  • @Pointy - It references a different question. The linked one clearly explains the behavior. As noted in the duplicate, [] and {} are both converted to their primitive values. .join on an empty array is an empty string. toString.call({}) is "[Object object]". Expressions cause concatenation, for example ("1"+0) = 10 or "[Object object]" + "" = "[Object object]"
    – Travis J
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:44
  • 1
    @TravisJ I agree that it's a matter of opinion over whether it's really a duplicate. I don't have a big problem with duplicates, but I understand that others do so if you feel strongly about it go ahead and close it and I won't touch it :)
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:48
  • @TravisJ Also I didn't realize I had god-like powers to reopen without a vote :)
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:49

2 Answers 2

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Let's look at the language grammar, shall we? Section 12, Statements:

Statement :
    Block
    VariableStatement
    EmptyStatement
    ExpressionStatement
    ...lots of other stuff...

That's a very fancy way of saying that a statement can be a block, a variable statement, an empty statement, an expression statement, or lots of other stuff. Notice that the first option there is a 'Block':

Block :
    { StatementList(opt) }

StatementList :
    Statement
    StatementList Statement

Which is again, a fancy way of saying that a block is a {, optionally followed by a bunch of statements, followed by a }.

And that's what you see in your example: Before the JavaScript parser thinks that what you have could be an object literal (which is defined somewhere under ExpressionStatement, the 4th thing a 'Statement' could be), it first thinks that you have a 'Block'.

Edit: If you want, you can see it live in a JavaScript engine's source code:

Regarding your second question, that's been covered to great detail on this question. To summarise in a sentence: Node.js treats your input as if it were an expression (thus it can't be a 'Block'), while Firebug/Chrome dev tools treat it like a 'Statement'.

5
  • I don't think it's correct that the Node REPL treats the input like an expression - you can type in a for loop in the REPL, for example.
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:43
  • That's why the summary is in a sentence. Benjamin Gruenbaum's answer goes into more detail: the REPL first tries to execute it as an expression, and if a SyntaxError is thrown, it goes to straightforward eval. Why? shrug
    – Zirak
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:45
  • OK I see now - Node explicitly checks for the case of an object literal (leading {). I don't think I'd do that (principal of least surprise) but whatever.
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:47
  • Thank you for the interesting references! I still don't understand why the semicolon in the Node.js example matters. Oct 13, 2014 at 21:50
  • Well, a semicolon isn't allowed in an expression, so it'd fail to be evaluated as an expression and instead be evaluated as a statement.
    – Zirak
    Oct 13, 2014 at 22:13
2

When the first token in a new statement is {, then {} is interpreted as an empty block.

(Actually of course when { appears after the header clause of something like if or while, then {} is an empty block too, but that's not the interesting case.)

Thus in any other context, like say an argument to a function:

foo({});

the {} is interpreted as an empty object literal.

This situation is similar to the way in which the function keyword is treated differently when it's the first thing in a statement. The syntax has ambiguity, and the parser solves the problem with fixed rules.

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  • How do you explain the first Node.js example? Thanks! Oct 13, 2014 at 19:32
  • @EllaShar I'm not too familiar with Node, but it basically just passes the string you type to eval(), but it does it in some way that alters the syntactic context. If you type ;{}+[] in Node, then you get 0 like in Firebug.
    – Pointy
    Oct 13, 2014 at 19:34
  • Token parsing would do backtracking; why would {...x.d} === x.d not do backtracking to correct the evaluation that it is an expression, not a statement? Would it lead to too many performance hits for parsers? It seems weird to leave such things in language unless solving these would cause a lot of pain.
    – soumitra
    Feb 29 at 21:07

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