Division by zero is not an error in JavaScript: it simply returns infinity or negative infinity. There is one exception, however: zero divided by zero does not have a well- defined value, and the result of this operation is the special not-a-number value, printed as NaN . NaN also arises if you attempt to divide infinity by infinity, or take the square in JavaScript root of a negative number or use arithmetic operators with non-numeric operands that cannot be converted to numbers. for Example
1. 0===0 returns True & 1==1 returns true
2. 0/0 returns NaN & 1/1 returns 1
Zero is Number and one is also a number?
I want the explanation? Why this Exactly happens in JavaScript only?