Understanding JavaScript Truthy and Falsy

From my understanding, I believe that var a = 1; is the only truthy and the rest are falsy’s - is this correct?

No.

  1. var a = 0;

    Number zero is falsy. However, note that the string zero "0" is truthy.

  2. var a = 10 == 5;

    This is same as var a = (10 == 5);, so this is falsy.

  3. var a = 1;

    var a = -1;

    Any non-zero number including negative numbers is truthy.

Quoting from MDN

In JavaScript, a truthy value is a value that translates to true when evaluated in a Boolean context. All values are truthy unless they are defined as falsy (i.e., except for false, 0, "", null, undefined, and NaN).

List of falsy values in JavaScript:From MDN

  1. false
  2. null
  3. undefined
  4. 0
  5. NaN
  6. '', "", ``(Empty template string)
  7. document.all
  8. 0n: BigInt
  9. -0

There's a simple way to check, which you can use now and forever:

function truthyOrFalsy(a) {
    return a ? "truthy" : "falsy";
}

To wit:

> truthyOrFalsy(0)
"falsy"
> truthyOrFalsy(10 == 5)
"falsy"
> truthyOrFalsy(1)
"truthy"
> truthyOrFalsy(-1)
"truthy"

Also see a list of all falsey values in JavaScript.


Truthy -> Value that resolve to true in boolean context

Falsy -> Value that resolve to false in boolean context


For better understanding, `falsy` values are given below.
  1. false
  2. 0
  3. empty string
  4. null
  5. undefined
  6. NaN

Tags:

Javascript