I came across this recently, "+string" converting the string to a number (specifically, using the plus operator in front of a string or string variable for type coercion), but wasn't able to find documentation or discussion that satisfied my interested. I get the impression it's lazy or could have unintended side effects, but I want to understand it better. Any insight is appreciated.
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Can you provide an example, of how it is being used?– Adam Buchanan SmithSep 1, 2016 at 22:24
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1Not for concatenation, but for type coercion.– gatorSep 1, 2016 at 22:24
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developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…– Hamlet HakobyanSep 1, 2016 at 22:24
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1Again, not asking about the arithmetic operator. Asking about type coercion.– gatorSep 1, 2016 at 22:25
2 Answers
As the ECMAScript spec describes in section 12.5.6:
12.5.6 Unary + Operator
NOTE The unary + operator converts its operand to Number type.
So in JavaScript, the unary +
operator (e.g., +x
) will always convert the expression x
into a number. In other words, the following statements are equivalent:
var x = Number('1234');
var y = +'1234';
This also works on any variable, not only strings or numbers. If the object you try to convert is not an string or number, then the toString()
method of that object will be called to convert the object into a string, and then that will be converted into a number. For example:
var obj = {
toString: function() { return '9999'; }
};
var num = +obj; // = 9999
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1Well, I'd say that's prety much how it works under the hood, it just calls the
Number
constructor (or at least its internal equivalent) and converts the argument to a number.– FrxstremSep 1, 2016 at 22:26 -
Looks like
+
, callsvalueOf()
method, if it's available, otherwise callstoString()
method, and then converts the returned value to Number. See this answer. Oct 2, 2023 at 5:08
The unary plus operator is the same as unary minus. You are probably familiar with this syntax:
const a = 1;
console.log(-a); // -> -1
What happens is the value of a
is type-casted to Number, and then the operation is applied to resulting value. This is why you will end up with NaN
if you try to apply unary operator to a string, say
const a = 'abc';
console.log(-a); // -> NaN
although the string "123"
will be successfully type-casted to a Number 123
, and you'll see -123
:
const a = '123';
console.log(-a); // -> -123
The +
works the same way but it doesn't negate the value. So if you do
+123
the value will remain 123
. If you do
+'abc'
the value will be NaN
, just as in case with -'abc'
. But if you do
+'123'
then "123"
(string) will be type-casted to 123
(number), applied with +
(nothing happens to the number), and returned. So you'll end up with 123
(number).