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JavaScript Equality Table Game

…or why you should prefer the === operator.


Build Status

Screenshot

Screenshot

About ==

The == or loose equality operator (and its counterpart !=) in JavaScript tries to save the user from having to explicitly convert (cast) values to a common type to make comparisons, so, for example, "5" == 5 implicitly converts (coerces) the string "5" to a number, so the comparison 'just works'. Without loose equality, the same comparison would need to be expressed as either Number("5") == 5 or "5" == String(5), or, at the shortest, +"5" == 5 to be true.

The general principle behind having implicit type conversion is called weak typing, and it's useful to the degree that it makes code more terse, but the flip side is that the implicit conversion rules are basically guesswork about what the user would expect, and, as such, can guess wrong and lead to unexpected results.

== doesn't check for truthiness or falsiness

Values that convert to either true or false are called truthy or falsy; for example, 0 is falsy because !!0 or Boolean(0) result in false. Other examples of falsy values are empty strings, null and undefined. Meanwhile, all objects (except document.all) are truthy, so !![] (array object converted to boolean) results in true.

One would reasonably expect that being truthy also implies == true and falsy implies == false, but that's not the case: [] is truthy, but [] == true is actually false.

== breaks transitivity

Transitivity means that if A equals B and B equals C, then A should equal C, but this is not always true with ==; for example, '' == 0, and 0 == '0', but '' != '0'.

=== isn't a panacea for typing issues

Tripple equals or strict equality checking rules are much simpler than ==; objects are compared by identity and primitives by value (roughly speaking), but it's still possible to create subtle type-related error conditions by forgetting to convert the compared values to the same type. For example, the user might compare "1" === 2, intending to compare numbers, and the resulting false would suggest that the comparison is working correctly, even though "2" === 2 would fail.

A language like TypeScript would catch these issues, because static typing follows the fail-fast design principle, while dynamic typing ultimately follows garbage in, garbage out – the responsibility is on the user to make sure that the comparison is sound.

Trivia

Brendan Eich was asked to add the loose equality checking rules by a coworker in Netscape and considers it a mistake.[citation needed]

Motivation

The initial reason to make this game was to try out state management with immer-wieder, but it's also to demonstrate that the == rules are easy to get wrong even if you feel like you're familiar with them. It's in response to claims like this one by the well-known author getify:

However, implicit coercion is a mechanism that can be learned, and moreover should be learned by anyone wishing to take JavaScript programming seriously. Not only is it not confusing once you learn the rules, it can actually make your programs better! The effort is well worth it.

If the implicit coercion rules were as non-confusing as claimed by getify, most experienced JavaScript users would be able to get close to perfect scores in this game, but there are many reports about giving it a serious attempt and being surprised by the poor results, including from seasoned users.

Emojis

The game uses emojis; your system and browser should preferably support color fonts and have an emoji font like EmojiOne or Noto Color Emoji installed for the emojis to display properly. If not, the game will provide fallback SVG images from emojitwo (using emoji-extractor).

Build

npm i
npm run build # or: npm run start

Adding a translation

The translation string template is translations/en-US.json, and new translations need to be registered in translationData.js.

Tools used

License

MIT

Author

slikts <[email protected]>

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