null
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The null keyword refers to the null primitive value, which represents the intentional absence of any object value.
Try it
function getVowels(str) {
const m = str.match(/[aeiou]/gi);
if (m === null) {
return 0;
}
return m.length;
}
console.log(getVowels("sky"));
// Expected output: 0
Syntax
null
Description
The keyword null is a literal for the null value. Unlike undefined, which is a global variable, null is not an identifier but a syntax keyword.
null has the following behaviors:
- Like
undefined, accessing any property onnullthrows aTypeErrorinstead of returningundefinedor searching prototype chains. - Like
undefined,nullis treated as falsy for boolean operations, and nullish for nullish coalescing and optional chaining. - The
typeof nullresult is"object". This is a bug in JavaScript that cannot be fixed due to backward compatibility. - Unlike
undefined,JSON.stringify()can representnullfaithfully.
JavaScript is unique to have two nullish values: null and undefined. Semantically, their difference is very minor: undefined represents the absence of a value, while null represents the absence of an object. For example, the end of the prototype chain is null because the prototype chain is composed of objects; document.querySelector() returns null if it doesn't match, because had it matched, the result would be an object. If you are designing an API, you should likely accept null and undefined as equivalent inputs, because many codebases have stylistic rules about when to use null or undefined by default.
Examples
>Difference between null and undefined
When checking for null or undefined, beware of the differences between equality (==) and identity (===) operators, as the former performs type-conversion.
typeof null; // "object" (not "null" for legacy reasons)
typeof undefined; // "undefined"
null === undefined; // false
null == undefined; // true
null === null; // true
null == null; // true
!null; // true
Number.isNaN(1 + null); // false
Number.isNaN(1 + undefined); // true
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-null-value> |
Browser compatibility
Loading…