59

If unary +/- operators are used to perform conversions as the Number() casting function, then why do we need unary operators? What's the special need of these unary operators?

Chris Martin
  • 30,334
  • 10
  • 78
  • 137
dragonfly
  • 3,203
  • 7
  • 30
  • 52

2 Answers2

76

The Unary + operator converts its operand to Number type. The Unary - operator converts its operand to Number type, and then negates it. (per the ECMAScript spec)

In practice, Unary - is used for simply putting negative numbers in normal expressions, e.g.:

var x = y * -2.0;

That's the unary minus operator at work. The Unary + is equivalent to the Number() constructor called as a function, as implied by the spec.

I can only speculate on the history, but the unary +/- operators behave similarly in many C-derived languages. I suspect the Number() behavior is the addition to the language here.

Ben Zotto
  • 70,108
  • 23
  • 141
  • 204
1

The practical side of this is if you have a function that you need to return a number you can use

const result = +yourFunc()

instead of

const result = Number(yourFunc())

or

const result = -yourFunc()

instead of

const result = -Number(yourFunc())

It will return NaN the same way that Number().

IMO makes things a little harder to read, but could be useful to keep your lines short?

sirclesam
  • 2,109
  • 17
  • 13