Will's avatar

⬅️ See more posts

JS Tidbit: Nullish Coalescing

20 November 2020 (1 minute read)

🔮 This post is also available via Gemini.

javascript technology

This short post introduces a useful JavaScript operator to help make your one-liners even more concise.

The specification was added formally in the 11th edition of ECMAScript. It is implemented as a logical operator to selectively return the result of one of two expressions (or operands) based on one of the expressions resolving to a “nullish” value. A nullish value in JavaScript is one that is null or undefined.

In particular, the operator - given by ?? - will return the right-hand side if the left-hand expression resolves to null or undefined, and otherwise returns the left-hand side.

const x = y ?? z;

In the example above, z will be returned if y is “nullish”, and otherwise y will be returned.

Nullish coalescing is similar to (but stricter than) the more commonly-seen logical OR operator - given by || - which returns the result of the right-hand side expression if the left-hand side resolves to any falsy value, which includes nullish ones in addition to the boolean false, empty string (''), 0, NaN, etc.

More info is available on MDN and Wikipedia discusses null coalescing in other languages.

✉️ You can reply to this post via email.

📲 Subscribe to updates

If you would like to read more posts like this, then you can subscribe via RSS.