1

I'm doing some debugging right now, and the problem appears to be that two incompatible types (string and integer) are being multiplied together. Right now, when these are multiplied together, a NaN result is returned. I want to run the code in a mode such that when incompatible types are multiplied together, an error is thrown instead. I tried running the code in strict mode ('use strict') but this did not work. How would I do this?

console.log(2*'a')
> NaN
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  • 1
    You might want to look into TypeScript which would help with this kind of checking May 23, 2018 at 8:40

2 Answers 2

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Throw your own error, and handle appropriately, eg:

try { 
    if(isNaN( 2*'a')) throw new Error("not a number");
}
catch(err) {
   // handle error here
}

Or check the type of the variable to handle appropriately, eg.

if (typeof(variableName) === "number")) {
    console.log('variable is a number');
} else {
    throw new Error('variable is NOT a number');
}
3

You can't change Javascript's behavior with this. The ES6 spec is specific on how this behavior works.

If possible, try to re-architect your code so a string can't be assigned to this variable in the first place. If that's not possible, checking for NaN manually as @yezzz suggests is the next best option.

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