The strict equality operator (===
) behaves identically to the abstract equality operator (==
) except no type conversion is done, and the types must be the same to be considered equal.
Reference: Javascript Tutorial: Comparison Operators
The ==
operator will compare for equality after doing any necessary type conversions. The ===
operator will not do the conversion, so if two values are not the same type ===
will simply return false
. Both are equally quick.
To quote Douglas Crockford's excellent JavaScript: The Good Parts,
JavaScript has two sets of equality operators: ===
and !==
, and their evil twins ==
and !=
. The good ones work the way you would expect. If the two operands are of the same type and have the same value, then ===
produces true
and !==
produces false
. The evil twins do the right thing when the operands are of the same type, but if they are of different types, they attempt to coerce the values. the rules by which they do that are complicated and unmemorable. These are some of the interesting cases:
'' == '0' // false
0 == '' // true
0 == '0' // true
false == 'false' // false
false == '0' // true
false == undefined // false
false == null // false
null == undefined // true
' \t\r\n ' == 0 // true

The lack of transitivity is alarming. My advice is to never use the evil twins. Instead, always use ===
and !==
. All of the comparisons just shown produce false
with the ===
operator.
Update:
A good point was brought up by @Casebash in the comments and in @Phillipe Laybaert's answer concerning objects. For objects, ==
and ===
act consistently with one another (except in a special case).
var a = [1,2,3];
var b = [1,2,3];
var c = { x: 1, y: 2 };
var d = { x: 1, y: 2 };
var e = "text";
var f = "te" + "xt";
a == b // false
a === b // false
c == d // false
c === d // false
e == f // true
e === f // true
The special case is when you compare a primitive with an object that evaluates to the same primitive, due to its toString
or valueOf
method. For example, consider the comparison of a string primitive with a string object created using the String
constructor.
"abc" == new String("abc") // true
"abc" === new String("abc") // false
Here the ==
operator is checking the values of the two objects and returning true
, but the ===
is seeing that they're not the same type and returning false
. Which one is correct? That really depends on what you're trying to compare. My advice is to bypass the question entirely and just don't use the String
constructor to create string objects from string literals.
Reference
http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/5.1/#sec-11.9.3
Yes, it was added in version 2.5. The expression syntax is:
a if condition else b
First condition
is evaluated, then exactly one of either a
or b
is evaluated and returned based on the Boolean value of condition
. If condition
evaluates to True
, then a
is evaluated and returned but b
is ignored, or else when b
is evaluated and returned but a
is ignored.
This allows short-circuiting because when condition
is true only a
is evaluated and b
is not evaluated at all, but when condition
is false only b
is evaluated and a
is not evaluated at all.
For example:
>>> 'true' if True else 'false'
'true'
>>> 'true' if False else 'false'
'false'
Note that conditionals are an expression, not a statement. This means you can't use assignment statements or pass
or other statements within a conditional expression:
>>> pass if False else x = 3
File "<stdin>", line 1
pass if False else x = 3
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
You can, however, use conditional expressions to assign a variable like so:
x = a if True else b
Think of the conditional expression as switching between two values. It is very useful when you're in a 'one value or another' situation, it but doesn't do much else.
If you need to use statements, you have to use a normal if
statement instead of a conditional expression.
Keep in mind that it's frowned upon by some Pythonistas for several reasons:
- The order of the arguments is different from those of the classic
condition ? a : b
ternary operator from many other languages (such as C, C++, Go, Perl, Ruby, Java, Javascript, etc.), which may lead to bugs when people unfamiliar with Python's "surprising" behaviour use it (they may reverse the argument order).
- Some find it "unwieldy", since it goes contrary to the normal flow of thought (thinking of the condition first and then the effects).
- Stylistic reasons. (Although the 'inline
if
' can be really useful, and make your script more concise, it really does complicate your code)
If you're having trouble remembering the order, then remember that when read aloud, you (almost) say what you mean. For example, x = 4 if b > 8 else 9
is read aloud as x will be 4 if b is greater than 8 otherwise 9
.
Official documentation:
Best Solution
Depends upon the version. The
If
operator in VB.NET 2008 is a ternary operator (as well as a null coalescence operator). This was just introduced, prior to 2008 this was not available. Here's some more info: Visual Basic If announcementExample:
[EDIT]
Prior to 2008 it was
IIf
, which worked almost identically to theIf
operator described Above.Example: