===
checks for the same type as well. You'll understand with a few examples:
(1 == '1') //Returns true
Since ==
doesn't bother with types, that returns true. However, if you want strict type checking, you'd use ===
because that returns true only if the it's of the same type, and is the same value.
(1 === '1') //Returns false
(1 === 1) //Returns true
- Two strings are strictly equal when they have the same sequence of characters, same length, and same characters in corresponding
positions.
- Two numbers are strictly equal when they are numerically equal (have the same number value). NaN is not equal to anything,
including NaN. Positive and negative zeros are equal to one another.
- Two Boolean operands are strictly equal if both are true or both are false.
- Two objects are strictly equal if they refer to the same Object.
- Null and Undefined types are == (but not ===).
Reference