Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY static data property represents the negative Infinity value.
Try it
function checkNumber(smallNumber) {
if (smallNumber === Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY) {
return "Process number as -Infinity";
}
return smallNumber;
}
console.log(checkNumber(-Number.MAX_VALUE));
// Expected output: -1.7976931348623157e+308
console.log(checkNumber(-Number.MAX_VALUE * 2));
// Expected output: "Process number as -Infinity"
Value
The same as the negative value of the global Infinity property.
Property attributes of Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY | |
|---|---|
| Writable | no |
| Enumerable | no |
| Configurable | no |
Description
The Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY value behaves slightly differently than mathematical infinity:
- Any positive value, including
POSITIVE_INFINITY, multiplied byNEGATIVE_INFINITYisNEGATIVE_INFINITY. - Any negative value, including
NEGATIVE_INFINITY, multiplied byNEGATIVE_INFINITYisPOSITIVE_INFINITY. - Any positive value divided by
NEGATIVE_INFINITYis negative zero (as defined in IEEE 754). - Any negative value divided by
NEGATIVE_INFINITYis positive zero (as defined in IEEE 754). - Zero multiplied by
NEGATIVE_INFINITYisNaN. NaNmultiplied byNEGATIVE_INFINITYisNaN.NEGATIVE_INFINITY, divided by any negative value exceptNEGATIVE_INFINITY, isPOSITIVE_INFINITY.NEGATIVE_INFINITY, divided by any positive value exceptPOSITIVE_INFINITY, isNEGATIVE_INFINITY.NEGATIVE_INFINITY, divided by eitherNEGATIVE_INFINITYorPOSITIVE_INFINITY, isNaN.x > Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITYis true for any number x that isn'tNEGATIVE_INFINITY.
You might use the Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY property to indicate an error condition that returns a finite number in case of success. Note, however, that NaN would be more appropriate in such a case.
Because NEGATIVE_INFINITY is a static property of Number, you always use it as Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY, rather than as a property of a number value.
Examples
>Using NEGATIVE_INFINITY
In the following example, the variable smallNumber is assigned a value that is smaller than the minimum value. When the if statement executes, smallNumber has the value -Infinity, so smallNumber is set to a more manageable value before continuing.
let smallNumber = -Number.MAX_VALUE * 2;
if (smallNumber === Number.NEGATIVE_INFINITY) {
smallNumber = returnFinite();
}
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| ECMAScript® 2026 Language Specification> # sec-number.negative_infinity> |
Browser compatibility
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