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W3Schools
w3schools.com › jsref › jsref_undefined.asp
W3Schools.com
The undefined property indicates that a variable has not been assigned a value, or not declared at all.
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W3Schools
w3schools.com › js › tryit.asp
W3Schools online HTML editor
The W3Schools online code editor allows you to edit code and view the result in your browser
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Tutorial Republic
tutorialrepublic.com › faq › how-to-determine-if-variable-is-undefined-or-null-in-javascript.php
How to Determine If Variable is Undefined or NULL in JavaScript
So the correct way to test undefined variable or property is using the typeof operator, like this: if(typeof myVar === 'undefined').
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W3Schools Blog
w3schools.blog › home › difference between undefined value and null value
Difference between undefined value and null value - W3schools
April 24, 2018 - A value that is not defined and has no keyword is known as an undefined value whereas a null value is explicitly specified by the keyword “null”.
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MDN Web Docs
developer.mozilla.org › en-US › docs › Web › JavaScript › Reference › Global_Objects › undefined
undefined - JavaScript | MDN
A variable that has not been assigned a value is of type undefined. A method or statement also returns undefined if the variable that is being evaluated does not have an assigned value.
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W3docs
w3docs.com › javascript
The Difference Between Null and Undefined in JavaScript
Undefined is a variable in the global scope. The default value of undefined is the primitive value undefined.
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Dmitri Pavlutin
dmitripavlutin.com › 7-tips-to-handle-undefined-in-javascript
7 Tips to Handle undefined in JavaScript
March 23, 2023 - A detailed article about 'undefined' keyword in JavaScript. 7 tips on how to handle correctly 'undefined' and increase code durability.
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freeCodeCamp
freecodecamp.org › news › javascript-check-if-undefined-how-to-test-for-undefined-in-js
JavaScript Check if Undefined – How to Test for Undefined in JS
November 7, 2024 - An undefined variable or anything without a value will always return "undefined" in JavaScript. This is not the same as null, despite the fact that both imply an empty state. You'll typically assign a value to a variable after you declare it, ...
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Top answer
1 of 16
3235

If you are interested in finding out whether a variable has been declared regardless of its value, then using the in operator is the safest way to go. Consider this example:

// global scope
var theFu; // theFu has been declared, but its value is undefined
typeof theFu; // "undefined"

But this may not be the intended result for some cases, since the variable or property was declared but just not initialized. Use the in operator for a more robust check.

"theFu" in window; // true
"theFoo" in window; // false

If you are interested in knowing whether the variable hasn't been declared or has the value undefined, then use the typeof operator, which is guaranteed to return a string:

if (typeof myVar !== 'undefined')

Direct comparisons against undefined are troublesome as undefined can be overwritten.

window.undefined = "foo";
"foo" == undefined // true

As @CMS pointed out, this has been patched in ECMAScript 5th ed., and undefined is non-writable.

if (window.myVar) will also include these falsy values, so it's not very robust:

false
0
""
NaN
null
undefined

Thanks to @CMS for pointing out that your third case - if (myVariable) can also throw an error in two cases. The first is when the variable hasn't been defined which throws a ReferenceError.

// abc was never declared.
if (abc) {
    // ReferenceError: abc is not defined
} 

The other case is when the variable has been defined, but has a getter function which throws an error when invoked. For example,

// or it's a property that can throw an error
Object.defineProperty(window, "myVariable", { 
    get: function() { throw new Error("W00t?"); }, 
    set: undefined 
});
if (myVariable) {
    // Error: W00t?
}
2 of 16
1586

I personally use

myVar === undefined

Warning: Please note that === is used over == and that myVar has been previously declared (not defined).


I do not like typeof myVar === "undefined". I think it is long winded and unnecessary. (I can get the same done in less code.)

Now some people will keel over in pain when they read this, screaming: "Wait! WAAITTT!!! undefined can be redefined!"

Cool. I know this. Then again, most variables in Javascript can be redefined. Should you never use any built-in identifier that can be redefined?

If you follow this rule, good for you: you aren't a hypocrite.

The thing is, in order to do lots of real work in JS, developers need to rely on redefinable identifiers to be what they are. I don't hear people telling me that I shouldn't use setTimeout because someone can

window.setTimeout = function () {
    alert("Got you now!");
};

Bottom line, the "it can be redefined" argument to not use a raw === undefined is bogus.

(If you are still scared of undefined being redefined, why are you blindly integrating untested library code into your code base? Or even simpler: a linting tool.)


Also, like the typeof approach, this technique can "detect" undeclared variables:

if (window.someVar === undefined) {
    doSomething();
}

But both these techniques leak in their abstraction. I urge you not to use this or even

if (typeof myVar !== "undefined") {
    doSomething();
}

Consider:

var iAmUndefined;

To catch whether or not that variable is declared or not, you may need to resort to the in operator. (In many cases, you can simply read the code O_o).

if ("myVar" in window) {
    doSomething();
}

But wait! There's more! What if some prototype chain magic is happening…? Now even the superior in operator does not suffice. (Okay, I'm done here about this part except to say that for 99% of the time, === undefined (and ****cough**** typeof) works just fine. If you really care, you can read about this subject on its own.)

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W3Schools
w3schoolsua.github.io › js › js_mistakes_en.html
JavaScript Common Mistakes. Lessons for beginners. W3Schools in English
After the automatic redefinition, array methods and properties will produce undefined or incorrect results:
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Medium
medium.com › front-end-weekly › beginners-guide-dealing-with-undefined-in-javascript-d98ac7e413db
Beginner’s Guide: Dealing with Undefined in JavaScript | by Brandon Evans | Frontend Weekly | Medium
June 8, 2023 - Beginner’s Guide: Dealing with Undefined in JavaScript Learn the fundamentals of handling undefined values in JavaScript and avoid common pitfalls. In JavaScript, the undefined value represents the …
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W3Schools
w3schools.invisionzone.com › browser scripting › javascript
Uncaught ReferenceError: $ is not defined - W3Schools Forum
September 1, 2020 - Hi there, I was following this a tutorial about adding a page fade-in once the page has loaded. It is set up so it works even if javascript is disabled, which is ideal. https://www.abeautifulsite.net/a-clean-fade-in-effect-for-webpages However i am trying to add another class the snippet to the s...
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › javascript › undefined-in-javascript
Undefined in JavaScript - GeeksforGeeks
March 13, 2024 - Example: In the below example sayhi() function actually outputs and returns nothing. We assigned the sayhi function to the x variable, so we get an Undefined value in the x variable as the sayhi() function returns nothing.
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Flexiple
flexiple.com › javascript › undefined-vs-null-javascript
Undefined vs Null - Javascript - Flexiple
Understand the key differences between undefined and null in JavaScript. Learn how each is used and when to apply them effectively.
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DEV Community
dev.to › nashmeyah › undefined-vs-null-vs-undeclared-9f8
Undefined vs. Null vs. Undeclared - DEV Community
March 29, 2021 - "The undefined property indicates that a variable has not been assigned a value, or not declared at all.", (W3Schools, Online).
Top answer
1 of 5
16

There are two things you should understand about undefined:

  • the type undefined that can have only one value
  • the variable undefined

To explain:

  • There are so many values of type number (10, 10.01, 1e1). But there can be only one value of type undefined, and that value is stored in the variable undefined.

  • That value has no literal representation either. For example, number values 1, 100, 1e-1 are all literals of type number, but the value stored in the variable undefined has no literal form.

  • undefined is a variable, just a normal variable, that JavaScript declares and assigns it the value of type undefined in the global scope. So you can do all the following...

    typeof undefined;                       // "undefined"
    
    undefined = 100;
    typeof undefined;                       // "number"
    
    undefined = void 0;
    typeof undefined;                       // "undefined"
    
    window.undefined === undefined;         // true
    window.undefined === void 0;            // true
    
  • if you don't want to use the variable undefined, you can generate the value of type undefined by the expression void 0 -- whose sole purpose is to return a value of type undefined.

...can anyone please explain to me why this thing has been inserted into JavaScript...

JavaScript has had a history of bad design - not because of the people who designed it but because no one could foresee that this little scripting capability they were adding to Netscape would one day underpin the business of billion dollar companies.

...we have null value...

Although null can do things undefined does, it is more or less related to objects rather than scalars. Indeed, JavaScript considers null itself an object -- typeof null returns "object".

2 of 5
10

Sorry for answering an older question but the reason you need both undefined and null is simple: in a prototype-based duck-typing language you absolutely must differentiate between "this object does not define a value for X" and "this object says X is nothing/null/empty".

Without this capability there is no way to walk the prototype chain and so inheritance can't work; you must be able to determine that obj.someProp is undefined so you can look at obj.prototype.someProp, and onward up the chain until you find a value. If obj.someProp returned null there would be no way to know if it really was null or just meant "look at my prototype". The only other way around this is to inject some kludgy magic behind the scenes which breaks your ability to fuzz with the prototype chains and do various other bits of JS black magic.

Like much of Javascript, the idea of undefined and null seems wonky and stupid at first, then absolutely brilliant later (then back to wonky and stupid but with a reasonable explanation).

A language like C# will not compile if you access a property that doesn't exist and other dynamic languages often throw exceptions at runtime when you touch a property that doesn't exist, meaning you have to use special constructs to test for them. Plus classes means when an object is instantiated you already know its inheritance chain and all the properties it has - in JS I can modify a prototype 15 steps up the chain and those changes will appear on existing objects.