As it says in the question really, I tried value == NaN and it was false and then remembered that I should be using isNaN(value) to check for this.
Why the difference?
As it says in the question really, I tried value == NaN and it was false and then remembered that I should be using isNaN(value) to check for this.
Why the difference?
both NaN == NaN and NaN === NaN evaluate to false as from MDN
NaN is a special value which you can think of as for example Infinity. Infinity is not equal to another Infinity as it has NO DEFINED VALUE.
I can't put it any better than MDN do so...
Unlike all other possible values in JavaScript, it is not possible to rely on the equality operators (
==and===) to determine whether a value isNaNor not, because bothNaN == NaNandNaN === NaNevaluate tofalse. Hence, the necessity of anisNaNfunction.