Thursday, October 25, 2018

javascript - Why does Math.min([]) evaluate to 0?




Why does Math.min([]) evaluate to 0?




I would expect that it would evaluate to NaN since MDN's manpage for Math.min states "If at least one of the arguments cannot be converted to a number, NaN is returned."



So I guess the refined question is why does [] coerce to 0? Especially considering that [] is truthy (i.e. !![] === true) and Math.min(true) === 1. I am thinking about this wrong?



Tested on Node v7.0.0


Answer




Why does Math.min([]) evaluate to 0?





Because the spec says so:



Math.min casts each parameter to a number using...



ToNumber casts objects to a number using...



ToPrimitive casts objects to primitive values using...



[[Default Value]] internal method converts objects to primitives based on their hint parameter.




The default hint for all objects is string. Which means the array gets converted to a string, which for [] is "".



ToNumber then converts "" to 0, per the documented algorithm



Math.min then takes the only parameter and returns it, per its algorithm.


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