true
or false
value.
The most basic operator is the equality operator ==
. The equality operator compares two values and returns true
if they're equivalent or false
if they are not. Note that equality is different from assignment (=
), which assigns the value on the right of the operator to a variable on the left.
```js
function equalityTest(myVal) {
if (myVal == 10) {
return "Equal";
}
return "Not Equal";
}
```
If myVal
is equal to 10
, the equality operator returns true
, so the code in the curly braces will execute, and the function will return "Equal"
. Otherwise, the function will return "Not Equal"
.
In order for JavaScript to compare two different data types (for example, numbers
and strings
), it must convert one type to another. This is known as "Type Coercion". Once it does, however, it can compare terms as follows:
```js
1 == 1 // true
1 == 2 // false
1 == '1' // true
"3" == 3 // true
```
val
is equivalent to 12
.
testEqual(10)
should return "Not Equal"
testString: assert(testEqual(10) === "Not Equal");
- text: testEqual(12)
should return "Equal"
testString: assert(testEqual(12) === "Equal");
- text: testEqual("12")
should return "Equal"
testString: assert(testEqual("12") === "Equal");
- text: You should use the ==
operator
testString: assert(code.match(/==/g) && !code.match(/===/g));
```