use-isnan

Requires calls to isNaN() when checking for NaN.

In JavaScript, NaN is a special value of the Number type. It's used to represent any of the "not-a-number" values represented by the double-precision 64-bit format as specified by the IEEE Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic.

Because NaN is unique in JavaScript by not being equal to anything, including itself, the results of comparisons to NaN are confusing:

Therefore, use Number.isNaN() or global isNaN() functions to test whether a value is NaN.

Rule Details

This rule disallows comparisons to 'NaN'.

Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

/*eslint use-isnan: "error"*/

if (foo == NaN) {
    // ...
}

if (foo != NaN) {
    // ...
}

if (foo == Number.NaN) {
    // ...
}

if (foo != Number.NaN) {
    // ...
}

Examples of correct code for this rule:

/*eslint use-isnan: "error"*/

if (isNaN(foo)) {
    // ...
}

if (!isNaN(foo)) {
    // ...
}

Options

This rule has an object option, with two options:

enforceForSwitchCase

The switch statement internally uses the === comparison to match the expression's value to a case clause. Therefore, it can never match case NaN. Also, switch(NaN) can never match a case clause.

Examples of incorrect code for this rule with "enforceForSwitchCase" option set to true (default):

/*eslint use-isnan: ["error", {"enforceForSwitchCase": true}]*/

switch (foo) {
    case NaN:
        bar();
        break;
    case 1:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (NaN) {
    case a:
        bar();
        break;
    case b:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (foo) {
    case Number.NaN:
        bar();
        break;
    case 1:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (Number.NaN) {
    case a:
        bar();
        break;
    case b:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

Examples of correct code for this rule with "enforceForSwitchCase" option set to true (default):

/*eslint use-isnan: ["error", {"enforceForSwitchCase": true}]*/

if (Number.isNaN(foo)) {
    bar();
} else {
    switch (foo) {
        case 1:
            baz();
            break;
        // ...
    }
}

if (Number.isNaN(a)) {
    bar();
} else if (Number.isNaN(b)) {
    baz();
} // ...

Examples of correct code for this rule with "enforceForSwitchCase" option set to false:

/*eslint use-isnan: ["error", {"enforceForSwitchCase": false}]*/

switch (foo) {
    case NaN:
        bar();
        break;
    case 1:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (NaN) {
    case a:
        bar();
        break;
    case b:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (foo) {
    case Number.NaN:
        bar();
        break;
    case 1:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

switch (Number.NaN) {
    case a:
        bar();
        break;
    case b:
        baz();
        break;
    // ...
}

enforceForIndexOf

The following methods internally use the === comparison to match the given value with an array element:

Therefore, for any array foo, foo.indexOf(NaN) and foo.lastIndexOf(NaN) will always return -1.

Set "enforceForIndexOf" to true if you want this rule to report indexOf(NaN) and lastIndexOf(NaN) method calls.

Examples of incorrect code for this rule with "enforceForIndexOf" option set to true:

/*eslint use-isnan: ["error", {"enforceForIndexOf": true}]*/

var hasNaN = myArray.indexOf(NaN) >= 0;

var firstIndex = myArray.indexOf(NaN);

var lastIndex = myArray.lastIndexOf(NaN);

Examples of correct code for this rule with "enforceForIndexOf" option set to true:

/*eslint use-isnan: ["error", {"enforceForIndexOf": true}]*/

function myIsNaN(val) {
    return typeof val === "number" && isNaN(val);
}

function indexOfNaN(arr) {
    for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
        if (myIsNaN(arr[i])) {
            return i;
        }
    }
    return -1;
}

function lastIndexOfNaN(arr) {
    for (var i = arr.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
        if (myIsNaN(arr[i])) {
            return i;
        }
    }
    return -1;
}

var hasNaN = myArray.some(myIsNaN);

var hasNaN = indexOfNaN(myArray) >= 0;

var firstIndex = indexOfNaN(myArray);

var lastIndex = lastIndexOfNaN(myArray);

// ES2015
var hasNaN = myArray.some(Number.isNaN);

// ES2015
var firstIndex = myArray.findIndex(Number.isNaN);

// ES2016
var hasNaN = myArray.includes(NaN);

Known Limitations

This option checks methods with the given names, even if the object which has the method is not an array.

Version

This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.0.6.

Resources