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The strict equality (===) operator checks whether its two operands are equal, returning a Boolean result. Unlike the equality operator, the strict equality operator always considers operands of different types to be different.
The strict equality operators (=== and !==) provide the IsStrictlyEqual semantic.
The most notable difference between this operator and the equality (==) operator is that if the operands are of different types, the == operator attempts to convert them to the same type before comparing.
| ECMAScript® 2027 Language Specification # sec-equality-operators |
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This page was last modified on Jul 8, 2025 by MDN contributors.
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