Array to Array (abstract equality comparison)
[x] == y; // false - why?
[x]
and y
do not refer to the same object. Arrays are objects and the ==
operator tests that they are the same object, not simply two objects having identical values for all properties. In order to determine object-equality in that way, you'll have to manually enumerate the properties of each object and test each value.
According to The Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm used by ==
:
Return true if x and y refer to the same object. Otherwise, return false.
String to Array (abstract equality comparison)
x == y; // true - how ? oO
y
, an array, is coerced into a string because you used ==
when comparing it to x
, a string.
According to The Abstract Equality Comparison Algorithm used by ==
:
If Type(x) is either String or Number and Type(y) is Object, return
the result of the comparison x == ToPrimitive(y).
String to Array (strict equality comparison)
x === y; // fasle - okey
===
, unlike ==
, will not coerce y
into a string... so, you're comparing a string to an object.
According to The Strict Equality Comparison Algorithm used by ===
:
If Type(x) is different from Type(y), return false.