Is a boolean
stored as a 32-byte integer in memory? How about a null
value?
In the book Speaking Javascript,
it refers to a type tag being used to indicate the type of a value stored in memory. e.g. The type tag for Object
type was 000. What is a type tag?
How would I find the type tag of a value type such as a boolean
or string
?
From Andy Wingo's blog post on the topic:
Initially, all JavaScript implementations used tagged pointers to represent JS values. This is a old trick that comes from the observation that allocated memory takes up at least 4 or 8 bytes, and are aligned in such a way that the least significant bit or three will be zero.
So the type tags allow for all values to be stored uniformly. All values occupy one machine word (32/64 bit) and depending on the tag (which is the least significant bit or bits) they are interpreted either as a pointer to an object or as some integer/boolean/etc depending on the tag.
is boolean stored as a 32-byte integer in js memory?
A boolean also occupies one word. For a more specific answer I'd need to go though the v8 source. But if I remember correctly, true
and false
are represented as root pointers.
how to get the type tag of a value type(boolean,undefined,string, number);
No way to do it from JavaScript. It's internal implementation details.