旧行李 2008-12-11 14:19 采纳率: 25%
浏览 705
已采纳

在 JavaScript 比较中应该使用哪个 equals 操作符(vs) ?

I'm using JSLint to go through JavaScript, and it's returning many suggestions to replace == (two equals signs) with === (three equals signs) when doing things like comparing idSele_UNVEHtype.value.length == 0 inside of an if statement.

Is there a performance benefit to replacing == with ===?

Any performance improvement would be welcomed as many comparison operators exist.

If no type conversion takes place, would there be a performance gain over ==?

转载于:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/359494/which-equals-operator-vs-should-be-used-in-javascript-comparisons

  • 写回答

30条回答 默认 最新

  • csdnceshi62 2008-12-11 14:25
    关注

    The identity (===) operator behaves identically to the equality (==) operator except no type conversion is done, and the types must be the same to be considered equal.

    Reference: Javascript Tutorial: Comparison Operators

    The == operator will compare for equality after doing any necessary type conversions. The === operator will not do the conversion, so if two values are not the same type === will simply return false. Both are equally quick.

    To quote Douglas Crockford's excellent JavaScript: The Good Parts,

    JavaScript has two sets of equality operators: === and !==, and their evil twins == and !=. The good ones work the way you would expect. If the two operands are of the same type and have the same value, then === produces true and !== produces false. The evil twins do the right thing when the operands are of the same type, but if they are of different types, they attempt to coerce the values. the rules by which they do that are complicated and unmemorable. These are some of the interesting cases:

    '' == '0'           // false
    0 == ''             // true
    0 == '0'            // true
    
    false == 'false'    // false
    false == '0'        // true
    
    false == undefined  // false
    false == null       // false
    null == undefined   // true
    
    ' \t\r\n ' == 0     // true
    

    The lack of transitivity is alarming. My advice is to never use the evil twins. Instead, always use === and !==. All of the comparisons just shown produce false with the === operator.


    Update:

    A good point was brought up by @Casebash in the comments and in @Phillipe Laybaert's answer concerning reference types. For reference types == and === act consistently with one another (except in a special case).

    var a = [1,2,3];
    var b = [1,2,3];
    
    var c = { x: 1, y: 2 };
    var d = { x: 1, y: 2 };
    
    var e = "text";
    var f = "te" + "xt";
    
    a == b            // false
    a === b           // false
    
    c == d            // false
    c === d           // false
    
    e == f            // true
    e === f           // true
    

    The special case is when you compare a literal with an object that evaluates to the same literal, due to its toString or valueOf method. For example, consider the comparison of a string literal with a string object created by the String constructor.

    "abc" == new String("abc")    // true
    "abc" === new String("abc")   // false
    

    Here the == operator is checking the values of the two objects and returning true, but the === is seeing that they're not the same type and returning false. Which one is correct? That really depends on what you're trying to compare. My advice is to bypass the question entirely and just don't use the String constructor to create string objects.

    Reference
    http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/5.1/#sec-11.9.3

    本回答被题主选为最佳回答 , 对您是否有帮助呢?
    评论
查看更多回答(29条)

报告相同问题?

悬赏问题

  • ¥15 stm32代码移植没反应
  • ¥15 matlab基于pde算法图像修复,为什么只能对示例图像有效
  • ¥100 连续两帧图像高速减法
  • ¥15 组策略中的计算机配置策略无法下发
  • ¥15 如何绘制动力学系统的相图
  • ¥15 对接wps接口实现获取元数据
  • ¥20 给自己本科IT专业毕业的妹m找个实习工作
  • ¥15 用友U8:向一个无法连接的网络尝试了一个套接字操作,如何解决?
  • ¥30 我的代码按理说完成了模型的搭建、训练、验证测试等工作(标签-网络|关键词-变化检测)
  • ¥50 mac mini外接显示器 画质字体模糊