JavaScript: undefined !== undefined?

Solution 1:

The problem is that undefined compared to null using == gives true. The common check for undefined is therefore done like this:

typeof x == "undefined"

this ensures the type of the variable is really undefined.

Solution 2:

It turns out that you can set window.undefined to whatever you want, and so get object.x !== undefined when object.x is the real undefined. In my case I inadvertently set undefined to null.

The easiest way to see this happen is:

window.undefined = null;
alert(window.xyzw === undefined); // shows false

Of course, this is not likely to happen. In my case the bug was a little more subtle, and was equivalent to the following scenario.

var n = window.someName; // someName expected to be set but is actually undefined
window[n]=null; // I thought I was clearing the old value but was actually changing window.undefined to null
alert(window.xyzw === undefined); // shows false

Solution 3:

I'd like to post some important information about undefined, which beginners might not know.

Look at the following code:

 /* 
  * Consider there is no code above. 
  * The browser runs these lines only.
  */

   // var a;  
   // --- commented out to point that we've forgotten to declare `a` variable 

   if ( a === undefined ) {
       alert('Not defined');
   } else {
       alert('Defined: ' + a);
   }

   alert('Doing important job below');

If you run this code, where variable a HAS NEVER BEEN DECLARED using var, you will get an ERROR EXCEPTION and surprisingly see no alerts at all.

Instead of 'Doing important job below', your script will TERMINATE UNEXPECTEDLY, throwing unhandled exception on the very first line.


Here is the only bulletproof way to check for undefined using typeof keyword, which was designed just for such purpose:

   /* 
    * Correct and safe way of checking for `undefined`: 
    */

   if ( typeof a === 'undefined' ) {
       alert(
           'The variable is not declared in this scope, \n' +
           'or you are pointing to unexisting property, \n' +
           'or no value has been set yet to the variable, \n' + 
           'or the value set was `undefined`. \n' +
           '(two last cases are equivalent, don\'t worry if it blows out your mind.'
           );
   }

   /* 
    *  Use `typeof` for checking things like that
    */

This method works in all possible cases.

The last argument to use it is that undefined can be potentially overwritten in earlier versions of Javascript:

     /* @ Trollface @ */
        undefined = 2;
     /* Happy debuging! */  

Hope I was clear enough.

Solution 4:

That's a bad practice to use the == equality operator instead of ===.

undefined === undefined // true
null == undefined // true
null === undefined // false

The object.x === undefined should return true if x is unknown property.

In chapter Bad Parts of JavaScript: The Good Parts, Crockford writes the following:

If you attempt to extract a value from an object, and if the object does not have a member with that name, it returns the undefined value instead.

In addition to undefined, JavaScript has a similar value called null. They are so similar that == thinks they are equal. That confuses some programmers into thinking that they are interchangeable, leading to code like

value = myObject[name];
if (value == null) {
    alert(name + ' not found.');
}

It is comparing the wrong value with the wrong operator. This code works because it contains two errors that cancel each other out. That is a crazy way to program. It is better written like this:

value = myObject[name];
if (value === undefined) {
    alert(name + ' not found.');
}

Solution 5:

From - JQuery_Core_Style_Guidelines

  • Global Variables:
    typeof variable === "undefined"

  • Local Variables:
    variable === undefined

  • Properties:
    object.prop === undefined