UNB/ CS/ David Bremner/ teaching/ cs2613/ books/ mdn/ Reference/ Operators/ Strict equality (===)

The strict equality (===) operator checks whether its two operands are equal, returning a Boolean result. Unlike the equality operator, the strict equality operator always considers operands of different types to be different.

Syntax

x === y

Description

The strict equality operators (=== and !==) provide the IsStrictlyEqual semantic.

The most notable difference between this operator and the equality (==) operator is that if the operands are of different types, the == operator attempts to convert them to the same type before comparing.

Examples

Comparing operands of the same type

"hello" === "hello"; // true
"hello" === "hola"; // false

3 === 3; // true
3 === 4; // false

true === true; // true
true === false; // false

null === null; // true

Comparing operands of different types

"3" === 3; // false
true === 1; // false
null === undefined; // false
3 === new Number(3); // false

Comparing objects

const object1 = {
  key: "value",
};

const object2 = {
  key: "value",
};

console.log(object1 === object2); // false
console.log(object1 === object1); // true

Specifications

Browser compatibility

See also