To Binary
JavaScript has two boolean values: true
and false
. But, it also treats certain values as truthy
or falsy
. All values are truthy
except 0
, null
, undefined
, ""
, false
, and NaN
.
We can switch values between true and false using the negation operator !
. This conversion also converts the type to boolean
.
const a = null;
const b = undefined;
const c = "";
const d = 0;
console.log(typeof a); // object
console.log(typeof b); // undefined
console.log(typeof c); // string
console.log(typeof d); // number
const w = !a;
const x = !b;
const y = !c;
const z = !d;
console.log(typeof w); // boolean
console.log(typeof x); // boolean
console.log(typeof y); // boolean
console.log(typeof z); // boolean
This did change the type to boolean, but it also switched the value. If you need conversion to boolean but stay on the same truthy
or falsy
side, use !!
π€―
const a = null;
const b = undefined;
const c = "";
const d = 0;
console.log(typeof a); // object
console.log(typeof b); // undefined
console.log(typeof c); // string
console.log(typeof d); // number
const w = !!a;
const x = !!b;
const y = !!c;
const z = !!d;
console.log(typeof w); // boolean
console.log(typeof x); // boolean
console.log(typeof y); // boolean
console.log(typeof z); // boolean
// Let's check if they are all false though and haven't switched to true!
console.log(w); // false
console.log(x); // false
console.log(y); // false
console.log(z); // false
To String
Use toString()
method.
const num = 7;
console.log(typeof num); // number
const numString = num.toString();
console.log(typeof numString); // string
Or use the shortcut by appending to ""
π€―
const num = 7;
console.log(typeof num); // number
const numString = num + "";
console.log(typeof numString); // string
To Number
parseInt()
function parses a string and returns an integer. You pass the string as the first parameter and the second parameter is radix. It specifies which numeral system to use: hexadecimal (16), octal (8), or decimal (10).
console.log(parseInt("0xF", 16)); // 15
console.log(parseInt("321", 10)); // 321
Or use the shortcut by adding +
operator in front of the string! π€―
console.log(+"0xF"); // 15
console.log(+"321"); // 321
There are situations where the +
operator might be used for concatenation. In that case, use the bitwise NOT operator ~ twice.
console.log(~~"0xF"); // 15
console.log(~~"321"); // 321
Top comments (2)
Great job writing these.!
Thanks a ton! I appreciate it β₯οΈ