• Skyhighatrist@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      That's not true these days. You can try it yourself right in your browser's dev console.

      These results are from Firefox's console.

      0 == null == undefined
      > false
      0 == null
      > false
      0 == undefined
      > false
      null == undefined
      > true
      null === undefined
      > false
      

      And even in the one case where == says they are the same, you can fix that by making sure you are using === so that it doesn't do type coercion for the comparison.

              • shrugal@lemm.ee
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                9 months ago

                What's confusing about that? It's null, just two different kinds with slightly different meanings. Is having two boolean values also confusing?! Should we simplify it?

                I mean I can get behind trying to remove null entirely and replacing it with better concepts, but I cannot understand why having one more null value suddenly makes it confusing. You don't even have to care in 95% of the cases, and it can be useful in the other 5%.

                Honestly, it looks more like some kind of misguided purism to me.

    • ryan@the.coolest.zone
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      9 months ago

      Oh man, you've got me itching to get into the intricacies of JavaScript…

      One fun example of the difference: when doing arithmetic operations, null is indeed converted to 0, but undefined is converted to NaN. This has to do with null being an assigned value that represents empty, whereas undefined is not actually a value but a response indicating that there was no value assigned in the first place.

      • dan@upvote.au
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        9 months ago

        response indicating that there was no value assigned in the first place.

        You can explicitly assign undefined to a variable though.

        Another fun fact about JavaScript is that undefined never used to be a keyword. If you did var foo = undefined, foo would indeed have a value of undefined, but it was only because there was no variable called undefined in scope!

        You could do var undefined = 42 then var foo = undefined would actually set foo to 42! window.undefined = 42 would break all sorts of things.

        Thankfully this was fixed with ES5 in 2009, although it took a few years for browsers to make the change.