I have read a lot of good stuff on truthy and falsy (http://adripofjavascript.com/blog/drips/truthy-and-falsy-values-in-javascript.html), and in particular the differences between '==' and '===' in JavaScript. The best explanations and resources mainly from this Stack Overflow Question:
Which equals operator (== vs ===) should be used in JavaScript comparisons?
I am working on a form and need to store a boolean value into a hidden field with the following jQuery syntax:
$('[name="fieldName"]').val(true);
So I am inserting a boolean value, true or false, into the hidden field. During on screen processing, I grab this field value in a number of if-statements with the following code, and compare it as follows:
$('[name="fieldName"]').val() === "true"
Note how I am using the === operator to compare to the string value "true".
My question; if only Object in JavaScript is of type reference, then boolean must be a value type. I would therefore assume, as value comparisons with the === operator compare not only contents but the type, that the above expression should return false? However in my code it returns true - can anyone explain why this is?
This code previously used == for the comparison, but to avoid falsy risks I am implementing === wherever possible. Could it be something to do with jQuery converting the values for me?