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August 25, 2016 16:02
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An explanation of why double negation is valuable.
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var obj = {}; | |
if (obj) { | |
// this would run because obj is truthy. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/Truthy and https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/Falsy | |
} | |
if (!!obj) { | |
// this would also run because obj is truthy. | |
// when you negate it the first time, it becomes the value false | |
// when you negate it the second time, it turn that false value into true | |
} | |
if (!!obj === true) { | |
// this runs because the double negation results in a value of true | |
} | |
if (obj === true) { | |
// this would NOT run, because obj (which evaluates to {}) does NOT equal the value true | |
} | |
// Here's an example of a function that expects a true value and demonstrates how the double negation is valuable | |
var resultFromSomeOtherFunction = {}; | |
function aFunctionThatExpectsTrue(val) { | |
if (val === true) { | |
return 'nice!'; | |
} else { | |
throw new Error('I don\'t understand the non-boolean'); | |
} | |
} | |
aFunctionThatExpectsTrue(resultFromSomeOtherFunction); // this would throw an error | |
aFunctionThatExpectsTrue(!!resultFromSomeOtherFunction); // this would return the string 'nice!' |
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