In javascript, the `==` operator does the type conversion of the operands before comparison, whereas the === operator compares the values and the data types of the operands. The `Object.is()` method determines whether two values are the same value: `Object.is(value1, value2)`.
In javascript, the `==` operator does the type conversion of the operands before comparison, whereas the `===` operator compares the values and the data types of the operands. The `Object.is()` method determines whether two values are the same value: `Object.is(value1, value2)`.
`Object.is()` is not equivalent to the `==` operator. The `==` operator applies various coercions to both sides (if they are not the same type) before testing for equality (resulting in such behavior as `"" == false` being `true`), but `Object.is()` doesn't coerce either value.
@ -8,4 +8,4 @@ In javascript, the `==` operator does the type conversion of the operands before
<BadgeLinkcolorScheme='yellow'badgeText='Read'href='https://www.scaler.com/topics/javascript/difference-between-double-equals-and-triple-equals-in-javascript/'>The Difference Between == and === in Javascript</BadgeLink>
<BadgeLinkcolorScheme='yellow'badgeText='Read'href='https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Equality_comparisons_and_sameness#same-value_equality_using_object.is'>Equality comparisons and sameness - MDN</BadgeLink>
<BadgeLinkcolorScheme='yellow'badgeText='Read'href='https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Equality_comparisons_and_sameness#same-value_equality_using_object.is'>Equality comparisons and sameness - MDN</BadgeLink>