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Which wasn't everywhere in 2017, when isnan was created: IE11 didn't (and still doesn't, though it's less relevant) have isNaN()

(Not supporting a culture of taking a dependency for this sort of thing, though)



Just to be clear, because your comment made no sense to me: what IE11 doesn't support is Number.isNaN(). It definitely does support (and has since IE3) plain isNaN(): https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Refe...


Regular isNaN is very tricky, and almost never what you want: it first coerces its input to a Number, and then checks if that is NaN:

                isNaN   Number.isNaN
                -----   ------------
    {}           true          false
    [true]       true          false
    undefined    true          false
    "{}"         true          false


But none of those things you listed are numbers. The isNaN output is exactly what I want in pretty much every case.


isNaN does not tell you whether something is not a Number either. Applying isNaN to any of these returns false: null, true, false, [], "", "cabbage".




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