minus-squareSzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up129·edit-210 months agoSo in JavaScript there’s the assignment = and the comparator is == Since there’s no types JS will do implicit conversion before comparison when using == in a case like this if(false == '0'){ //this is true } But with === it doesn’t. It means literally compare these if(false === '0'){ //this is false }else{ //so this will execute instead } But this, however, will var someState = false; if(someState === false){ //this is true }
So in JavaScript there’s the assignment
and the comparator is
Since there’s no types JS will do implicit conversion before comparison when using == in a case like this
But with === it doesn’t. It means literally compare these
But this, however, will
deleted by creator
Np. closed as duplicate