Disclaimer : I'm a total beginner in JS
Well I'm reading Eloquent Javascript and one of the exercices is deep comparaison of objects in JS.
There are objects defined like :
var obj = {here: {is: "an"}, object: 2};
and you're supposed to check if their contents are equal. Then there are 3 tests :
console.log(deepEqual(obj, obj)); // supposed to return true
console.log(deepEqual(obj, {here: 1, object: 2})); // supposed to return false
console.log(deepEqual(obj, {here: {is: "an"}, object: 2})); // supposed to return true
Here is my implementation of the deep equal method. To simplify I assumed the objects compared have the same structure, which they wont in real life but then my method should return false (I think)
function deepEqual(obj1,obj2)
{
console.log("========");
for(prop in obj1)
{
console.log(prop);
if (typeof(prop)=="object" && prop!=null)
{
console.log("Inspecting object ", obj1[prop],obj2[prop]);
if (!deepEqual(obj1[prop],obj2[prop]))
{
return false;
}
}
else
{
console.log("Inspecting property ",prop,'[',obj1[prop],'][',obj2[prop],']');
if (obj1[prop]!=obj2[prop])
{
console.log("Different property");
return false;
}
}
}
return true;
}
var obj = {here: {is: "an"}, object: 2};
console.log(deepEqual(obj, obj));
// → true
console.log(deepEqual(obj, {here: 1, object: 2}));
// → false
console.log(deepEqual(obj, {here: {is: "an"}, object: 2}));
// → true
It returns respectively true, false and ....false !
Here is the output:
========
here
Inspecting property here [ {is: "an"} ][ {is: "an"} ]
object
Inspecting property object [ 2 ][ 2 ]
true
========
here
Inspecting property here [ {is: "an"} ][ 1 ]
Different property
false
========
here
Inspecting property here [ {is: "an"} ][ {is: "an"} ]
Different property
false
There are two things I don't understand :
- Why does it always go to "Inspecting property" and never to "Inspecting object" ? {is: "an"} is an object isn't it ?
- Why is the expression "obj1[prop]!=obj2[prop]" true, although, according to the logs, they are both equal to : {is: "an"} ?
FYI, the reference implementation from the book is :
function deepEqual(a, b) {
if (a === b) return true;
if (a == null || typeof a != "object" ||
b == null || typeof b != "object")
return false;
var propsInA = 0, propsInB = 0;
for (var prop in a)
propsInA += 1;
for (var prop in b) {
propsInB += 1;
if (!(prop in a) || !deepEqual(a[prop], b[prop]))
return false;
}
return propsInA == propsInB;
}
To me the first for loop just counts how many properties there are in A right ? I'm totally confused by the second for loop ( for (var prop in b) ) though ...
EDIT : Thanks a lot for the answers guys ! I don't know which one to accept as both helped me a lot :-/