Why does 2 == [2] in JavaScript?
I recently discovered that 2 == [2]
in JavaScript. As it turns out, this quirk has a couple of interesting consequences:
var a = [0, 1, 2, 3];
a[[2]] === a[2]; // this is true
Similarly, the following works:
var a = { "abc" : 1 };
a[["abc"]] === a["abc"]; // this is also true
Even stranger still, this works as well:
[[[[[[[2]]]]]]] == 2; // this is true too! WTF?
These behaviors seem consistent across all browsers.
Any idea why this is a language feature?
Here are more insane consequences of this "feature":
[0] == false // true
if ([0]) { /* executes */ } // [0] is both true and false!
var a = [0];
a == a // true
a == !a // also true, WTF?
These examples were found by jimbojw http://jimbojw.com fame as well as walkingeyerobot.
You can look up the comparison algorithm in the ECMA-spec (relevant sections of ECMA-262, 3rd edition for your problem: 11.9.3, 9.1, 8.6.2.6).
If you translate the involved abstract algorithms back to JS, what happens when evaluating 2 == [2]
is basically this:
2 === Number([2].valueOf().toString())
where valueOf()
for arrays returns the array itself and the string-representation of a one-element array is the string representation of the single element.
This also explains the third example as [[[[[[[2]]]]]]].toString()
is still just the string 2
.
As you can see, there's quite a lot of behind-the-scene magic involved, which is why I generally only use the strict equality operator ===
.
The first and second example are easier to follow as property names are always strings, so
a[[2]]
is equivalent to
a[[2].toString()]
which is just
a["2"]
Keep in mind that even numeric keys are treated as property names (ie strings) before any array-magic happens.
It is because of the implicit type conversion of ==
operator.
[2] is converted to Number is 2 when compared with a Number. Try the unary +
operator on [2].
> +[2]
2
var a = [0, 1, 2, 3];
a[[2]] === a[2]; // this is true
On the right side of the equation, we have the a[2], which returns a number type with value 2. On the left, we are first creating a new array with a single object of 2. Then we are calling a[(array is in here)]. I am not sure if this evaluates to a string or a number. 2, or "2". Lets take the string case first. I believe a["2"] would create a new variable and return null. null !== 2. So lets assume it is actually implicitly converting to a number. a[2] would return 2. 2 and 2 match in type (so === works) and value. I think it is implicitly converting the array to a number because a[value] expects a string or number. It looks like number takes higher precedence.
On a side note, I wonder who determines that precedence. Is because [2] has a number as it's first item, so it converts to a number? Or is it that when passing an array into a[array] it tries to turn the array into a number first, then string. Who knows?
var a = { "abc" : 1 };
a[["abc"]] === a["abc"];
In this example, you are creating an object called a with a member called abc. The right side of the equation is pretty simple; it is equivalent to a.abc. This returns 1. The left side first creates a literal array of ["abc"]. You then search for a variable on the a object by passing in the newly created array. Since this expects a string, it converts the array into a string. This now evaluates to a["abc"], which equals 1. 1 and 1 are the same type (which is why === works) and equal value.
[[[[[[[2]]]]]]] == 2;
This is just an implicit conversion. === wouldn't work in this situation because there is a type mismatch.
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