JavaScript Silent Errors
Silent Errors
JavaScript can fail siently.
A silent error will not stop your program. The execution will continue.
The reason for silent errors is historical:
The first version of JavaScript did not have catch...try exceptions.
Silent errors are issues that do not throw exceptions or stop execution, but still cause logic bugs, unexpected behavior, or failures that are easy to miss.
Below are some examples of common silent errors, with examples to try:
Example
Assignment, not comparison
let result = "Not Active.";
let isActive = false;
// ❌ Assignment, not comparison
if (isActive = true) {
let result = "Active!";
}
Try it Yourself »
Explanation
When execution reaches the if statement, you might expect that the conditional block will not be executed because isActive is false.
But, the code (isActive = true) in the evaluation will set
isActive to true instead of checking equality with (isActive == true).
This (true) is also the value of the if condition, so the block will be executed.
The above mistake is not an error that JavaScript could have detected (it may have been intended).
It is a mistake of the programmer.
Example
Many numeric operations that fail produce NaN (not an exception).
JavaScript will not crash. It just quietly gives you NaN and keeps going.
// NaN - no error, just wrong data
const result = parseInt("abc");
Try it Yourself »
Example
Accessing a missing property just returns undefined silently.
const user = {};
let result = user.name;
Try it Yourself »
Type Coercion
Type coercion is the automatic (implicit) conversion of values from one data type to another.
Because JavaScript is weakly typed, it doesn't throw errors when types don't match; it just tries to coerce them.
JavaScript coerces types differently per operator, so type coercion can hide bugs.
String Coercion (+)
If any part of a + operation is a string, JavaScript converts everything to strings:
let x = "5" + 2 // x = "52"
Numeric Coercion
Other arithmetic operators (-, *, /, %) and the unary plus (+x) force values into numbers.
let x = "5" - 2 // x = 3
Loose Equality (==)
This operator performs coercion to find a "common type" before comparing.
let x = (5 == "5") // x = true
Practices to Avoid Bugs
Use === (Strict Equality)
This checks both value and type without coercion, preventing weird results.
Be Explicit
Instead of relying on automatic behavior, use MDN's recommended conversion methods
like Number() or String() to make your intent clear.
Watch for NaN
If a string cannot be converted to a valid number, like "abc" - 1), the result is NaN (Not-a-Number).