16

Math.max([]) would be 0

And [..[]] is []

But why Math.max(...[]) is equal to -Infinity in ES2015?

6
  • Not that I need to know the answer, but I would also like to know. Mar 10, 2017 at 13:46
  • 6
    You're passing no arguments at all; -Infinity is where Math.max() starts from, so with no arguments that's what you get as an answer.
    – Pointy
    Mar 10, 2017 at 13:46
  • 3
    From the MDN page: If no arguments are given, the result is -Infinity.
    – Pointy
    Mar 10, 2017 at 13:46
  • 2
    Note that Math.max([]) is 0 because Number([]) is 0.
    – Pointy
    Mar 10, 2017 at 13:48
  • 1
    If applicable (i.e. you want '0' as your default), try Math.max(0, ...[])
    – ZephDavies
    Apr 25, 2018 at 11:39

6 Answers 6

11

What happens with Math.max([]) is that [] is first converted to a string and then to a number. It is not actually considered an array of arguments.

With Math.max(...[]) the array is considered a collection of arguments through the spread operator. Since the array is empty, this is the same as calling without arguments. Which according to the docs produces -Infinity

If no arguments are given, the result is -Infinity.


Some examples to show the difference in calls with arrays:

console.log(+[]); //0    [] -> '' -> 0
console.log(+[3]); //3    [] -> '3' -> 3
console.log(+[3,4]); //Nan 
console.log(...[3]); //3
console.log(...[3,4]); //3 4 (the array is used as arguments)
console.log(Math.max([])); //0  [] is converted to 0
console.log(Math.max()); // -infinity:  default without arguments
console.log(Math.max(...[])); // -infinity
console.log(Math.max([3,4])); //Nan
console.log(Math.max(...[3,4])); //4

4

If you see the internal implementation documentation, you can tell why Math.max is returning -Infinity when there is no argument passed.

If no arguments are given, the result is -∞.

So when you spread an empty array in a function call, it is like calling the function without an argument.

4
  • 1
    But the result is negative infinity, not positive.
    – Pointy
    Mar 10, 2017 at 13:48
  • @Pointy Hmm.. Interesting, even if i call Math.max(), It is giving me -Infinity. I think there must be typo there in the documentation. Let me look out for recent doc. Mar 10, 2017 at 13:50
  • In the very document you linked, it clearly says -∞. Positive infinity is what's returned from Math.min() when you pass no arguments.
    – Pointy
    Mar 10, 2017 at 13:52
  • 1
    @Pointy Uff.. Sorry man.. I was just confused. I linked a doc related to min. Corrected and updated the answer. Thanks for pointing though pointy ;) Mar 10, 2017 at 13:54
4

FTR the way to get around this is to use a MIN value with the spread operator. Like:

Math.max(MIN_VALUE, ...arr)
Math.max(0, ...[]) --> 0
Math.max(0, ...[1]) --> 1
Math.max(0, ...[23,1]) --> 23
0
3

If you look at the babel output for Math.max(...[]), you end up with Math.max.apply(Math, []). If you log that in ES5, you see that for some reason it gives you -Infinity, because it's the same as calling it without an argument.

And indeed, Math.max() gives -Infinity

If you need a reminder: fn.apply( yourThis, [ a, b, c ] ) is the same as fn( a, b, c )

2

Because Math.max(...[]) is not Math.max([...[]]). In the first case, what You really call is Math.max(), which is -Infinity. See the spread operator in function call - https://developer.mozilla.org/cs/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Spread_operator

1

When finding out what the biggest number is, where do you start? The answer is the lowest number, -Infinity

function max (array) {
    var highest = -Infinity;

    foreach(elem in array) if (elem > highest) highest= elem;

    return highest;
}

Not accurate code but you get the gist, credit to my friend since the internet let me down once again.

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