In the answers here, I didn't read anything about what equal means. Some will say that === means equal and of the same type, but that's not really true. It actually means that both operands reference the same object, or in case of value types, have the same value.
So, let's take the following code:
var a = [1,2,3];
var b = [1,2,3];
var c = a;
var ab_eq = (a === b); // false (even though a and b are the same type)
var ac_eq = (a === c); // true
The same here:
var a = { x: 1, y: 2 };
var b = { x: 1, y: 2 };
var c = a;
var ab_eq = (a === b); // false (even though a and b are the same type)
var ac_eq = (a === c); // true
Or even:
var a = { };
var b = { };
var c = a;
var ab_eq = (a === b); // false (even though a and b are the same type)
var ac_eq = (a === c); // true
This behavior is not always obvious. There's more to the story than being equal and being of the same type.
The rule is:
For value types (numbers):
a === b returns true if a and b have the same value and are of the same type
For reference types:
a === b returns true if a and b reference the exact same object
For strings:
a === b returns true if a and b are both strings and contain the exact same characters
Strings: the special case...
Strings are not value types, but in Javascript they behave like value types, so they will be "equal" when the characters in the string are the same and when they are of the same length (as explained in the third rule)
Now it becomes interesting:
var a = "12" + "3";
var b = "123";
alert(a === b); // returns true, because strings behave like value types
But how about this?:
var a = new String("123");
var b = "123";
alert(a === b); // returns false !! (but they are equal and of the same type)
I thought strings behave like value types? Well, it depends who you ask... In this case a and b are not the same type. a is of type Object, while b is of type string. Just remember that creating a string object using the String constructor creates something of type Object that behaves as a string most of the time.
=== vs ==, but in PHP, can read here: stackoverflow.com/questions/2401478/why-is-faster-than-in-php/… – Marco Demaio Dec 31 '10 at 12:33===is way faster than==. jsperf.com/comparison-of-comparisons – Ryan O'Hara♦ Jul 3 '12 at 23:02===over==. In fact, the benchmark doesn't show a big difference between both on modern browsers. Personally, I usually use==everywhere unless I really need strict equality. – this.lau_ Dec 25 '12 at 9:09==are not needed, the use of===instead is good practice, not premature optimization. There's nothing about===that degrades code maintainability or readability. – Robert Harvey♦ Apr 22 '13 at 17:48