163

How do I determine if two jQuery objects are equal? I would like to be able to search an array for a particular jQuery object.

$.inArray(jqobj, my_array);//-1    
alert($("#deviceTypeRoot") == $("#deviceTypeRoot"));//False
alert($("#deviceTypeRoot") === $("#deviceTypeRoot"));//False

7 Answers 7

246

Since jQuery 1.6, you can use .is. Below is the answer from over a year ago...

var a = $('#foo');
var b = a;


if (a.is(b)) {
    // the same object!
}

If you want to see if two variables are actually the same object, eg:

var a = $('#foo');
var b = a;

...then you can check their unique IDs. Every time you create a new jQuery object it gets an id.

if ($.data(a) == $.data(b)) {
    // the same object!
}

Though, the same could be achieved with a simple a === b, the above might at least show the next developer exactly what you're testing for.

In any case, that's probably not what you're after. If you wanted to check if two different jQuery objects contain the same set of elements, the you could use this:

$.fn.equals = function(compareTo) {
  if (!compareTo || this.length != compareTo.length) {
    return false;
  }
  for (var i = 0; i < this.length; ++i) {
    if (this[i] !== compareTo[i]) {
      return false;
    }
  }
  return true;
};

Source

var a = $('p');
var b = $('p');
if (a.equals(b)) {
    // same set
}
6
  • 1
    This solution simplifies to that given by thephpdeveloper when there is only a single element. Another sense in which jQuery objects can be considered equal is whether they have the same selector and context. This is easy enough to test: A.selector === B.selector && A.context === B.context. Often the context will always be the same, so we only have to consider the selector.
    – Casebash
    Jul 5, 2010 at 4:55
  • 2
    @Casebash - true, however consider that several selectors could end up with the same result set, eg: $(':first') and $('*:first')
    – nickf
    Jul 5, 2010 at 8:07
  • 3
    Caution @rampion and nickf, jQuery is() does not check that selectors are identical, merely that they overlap. Witness: jsfiddle.net/bnhkm/1
    – Bob Stein
    Jul 28, 2013 at 17:57
  • your equals function seems to be order-sensitive. something like stackoverflow.com/a/29648479 would work in more cases, although it's slower.
    – Jayen
    Dec 26, 2015 at 1:57
  • 1
    The question is about jquery objects, not objects in general.
    – nickf
    May 3, 2016 at 12:13
17

If you still don't know, you can get back the original object by:

alert($("#deviceTypeRoot")[0] == $("#deviceTypeRoot")[0]); //True
alert($("#deviceTypeRoot")[0] === $("#deviceTypeRoot")[0]);//True

because $("#deviceTypeRoot") also returns an array of objects which the selector has selected.

3
  • 1
    The two alerts will display true, because you are comparing the reference of the DOM element, == vs === will give you the same results (no type coercion needed, they are just two object references) Jul 5, 2010 at 2:34
  • Your second statement is actually returning True
    – Casebash
    Jul 5, 2010 at 2:39
  • ah yes it's true. copy and paste mistake =D
    – mauris
    Jul 5, 2010 at 4:16
15

The $.fn.equals(...) solution is probably the cleanest and most elegant one.

I have tried something quick and dirty like this:

JSON.stringify(a) == JSON.stringify(b)

It is probably expensive, but the comfortable thing is that it is implicitly recursive, while the elegant solution is not.

Just my 2 cents.

3
  • 1
    that's not good for checking equality between two jQuery objects but for standard objects. like "{a:'x',b:'y',c:'z'} == {a:'x',b:'y',c:'z'}". i'm wondering that there is no jQuery.isEqual(a, b)...
    – iRaS
    Apr 4, 2013 at 6:44
  • 16
    This is wrong. Order of the object properties matters. So if you have {a: 1, b: 2} and {b: 2, a: 1} this will return false when it should return true. May 12, 2014 at 19:41
  • 3
    @EricAlberson, do you have any suggestions on other deep compare tools or scripts that could handle this situation? Aug 13, 2014 at 19:14
8

It is, generally speaking, a bad idea to compare $(foo) with $(foo) as that is functionally equivalent to the following comparison:

<html>
<head>
<script language='javascript'>
    function foo(bar) {
        return ({ "object": bar });
    }

    $ = foo;

    if ( $("a") == $("a") ) {
        alert ("JS engine screw-up");
    }
    else {
        alert ("Expected result");
    }

</script>

</head>
</html>

Of course you would never expect "JS engine screw-up". I use "$" just to make it clear what jQuery is doing.

Whenever you call $("#foo") you are actually doing a jQuery("#foo") which returns a new object. So comparing them and expecting same object is not correct.

However what you CAN do may be is something like:

<html>
<head>
<script language='javascript'>
    function foo(bar) {
        return ({ "object": bar });
    }

    $ = foo;

    if ( $("a").object == $("a").object ) {
        alert ("Yep! Now it works");
    }
    else {
        alert ("This should not happen");
    }

</script>

</head>
</html>

So really you should perhaps compare the ID elements of the jQuery objects in your real program so something like

... 
$(someIdSelector).attr("id") == $(someOtherIdSelector).attr("id")

is more appropriate.

1
  • 1
    Just to be clear, jQuery doesn't have an object attribute. Elf King seems to be using this as pseudocode
    – Casebash
    Jul 5, 2010 at 3:09
6

First order your object based on key using this function

function sortObject(o) {
    return Object.keys(o).sort().reduce((r, k) => (r[k] = o[k], r), {});
}

Then, compare the stringified version of your object, using this funtion

function isEqualObject(a,b){
    return JSON.stringify(sortObject(a)) == JSON.stringify(sortObject(b));
}

Here is an example

Assuming objects keys are ordered differently and are of the same values

var obj1 = {"hello":"hi","world":"earth"}
var obj2 = {"world":"earth","hello":"hi"}

isEqualObject(obj1,obj2);//returns true
4

Use Underscore.js isEqual method http://underscorejs.org/#isEqual

0
-1

If you want to check contents are equal or not then just use JSON.stringify(obj)

Eg - var a ={key:val};

var b ={key:val};

JSON.stringify(a) == JSON.stringify(b) -----> If contents are same you gets true.

1
  • 1
    You need to sort the keys first like Kareem's answer Jun 3, 2020 at 17:41

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