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JavaScript Data Types Explained

Learn about data types in JavaScript in this JS Quickie

2 min readSep 11, 2017

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JavaScript Data Types Explained

Two Kinds of Data

In JavaScript there are two different kinds of data: primitives, and objects. A primitive is simply a data type that is not an object, and has no methods.

In JS, there are six primitive data types:

  • Boolean
  • Number
  • String
  • Null
  • Undefined
  • Symbol

Boolean

A boolean represents only one of two values: true, or false. Think of a boolean as an on/off or a yes/no switch.

var boo1 = true;
var boo2 = false;

Number

There is only one type of Number in JavaScript. Numbers can be written with or without a decimal point. A number can also be +Infinity, -Infinity, and NaN (not a number).

var num1 = 32;
var num2 = +Infinity;

String

Strings are used for storing text. Strings must be inside of either double or single quotes. In JS, Strings are immutable (they cannot be changed).

var str1 = 'hello, it is me';
var str2 = "hello, it's me";

Null

Null has one value: null. It is explicitly nothing.

var nothing = null;

Undefined

A variable that has no value is undefined.

var testVar;
console.log(testVar); // undefined

Symbol

Symbols are new in ES6. A Symbol is an immutable primitive value that is unique. For the sake of brevity, that is the extent that this article will cover Symbols.

const mySymbol = Symbol('mySymbol');

What about Objects?

Objects are not a primitive data Type.

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An object is a collection of properties. These properties are stored in key/value pairs. Properties can reference any type of data, including objects and/or primitive values.

var obj = {
key1: 'value',
key2: 'value',
key3: true,
key4: 32,
key5: {}
}

Loosely Typed

JavaScript is a loosely typed language. This means you don’t have to declare a variable’s type. JavaScript automatically determines it for you. It also means that a variables type can change. Let’s look at an example:

We’ll create a variable named car and set it equal to a string value:

var car = 'ford';

Later, we realize we want the value of car to be the year it was made, so we change car to a number:

car = 1998;

It works — and JavaScript could care less. Because JS is loosely typed, we are free to change variable types as we please.

Closing Notes:

Thanks for reading! I publish 4 articles on web development each week. Please consider entering your email here if you’d like to be added to my once-weekly email list, or follow me on Twitter.

If you want to improve your JavaScript Skills even more, check out: A Beginners Guide to Advanced JavaScript

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Published in codeburst

Bursts of code to power through your day. Web Development articles, tutorials, and news.

Brandon Morelli
Brandon Morelli

Written by Brandon Morelli

Creator of @codeburstio — Frequently posting web development tutorials & articles. Follow me on Twitter too: @BrandonMorelli