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arrays - JavaScript null and plus (+) operatior

I am trying to understand the core of JavaScript. I know it doesnt have much implementation value. If you dont want to answer, just leave it. However, I will appreciate if you could help to understand the following type coercion while applying addition(+).

1. 
null + null // 0
2.
null + undefined; // NaN
3.
null + NaN; // NaN
4. 
1 + null; //1
5. 
true + null; //1
6. 
true + [null]; //"true"

I know null is an empty or missing object. I will appreciate, if you can explain steps in type coercion or unary(+) operation here. Thanks for reading the question.

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This is covered in 11.6.1 The Addition operator ( + ) - feel free to read it and follow the rules.

The first five cases can be explained by looking at ToNumber:

Value       ToNumber(Value)
---------   ---------------
null        0
undefined   NaN
NaN         NaN
1           1
true        1

And 0 + 0 == 0 (and 1 + 0 == 1), while x + NaN or NaN + x evaluates to NaN. Since every value above is also a primitive, ToPrimitive(x) evaluates to x (where x is not a string) and the "string concatenation clause" was not invoked.

The final case is different in that it results from the ToPrimitive (which ends up calling Array.prototype.toString) on the array which results in a string value. Thus it ends up applying ToString, not ToNumber, and follows as such:

   true + [null]
=> true + ""          // after ToPrimitive([null]) => ""
=> "true" + ""        // after ToString(true) => "true"
=> "true"             // via String Concatenation

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