One neat feature is you can compare to both null and undefined at the same time, without other falsey values giving false positives. Although that’s not necessary as often now that we have nullish coalescing and optional chaining.
I just tested and Terser will convert v === null || v === undefined to null==v. Personally I would prefer to read the code that explicitly shows that it is checking for both and let my minifier/optimizer worry about generating compact code.
JS’s
==
has some gotchas and you almost never want to use it. So===
is what==
should have been.All examples are true:
"1" == true [1, 2] == "1,2" " " == false null == undefined
It isn’t that insane. But some invariants that you may expect don’t hold.
"" == 0 "0" == 0 "" != "0"
One neat feature is you can compare to both null and undefined at the same time, without other falsey values giving false positives. Although that’s not necessary as often now that we have nullish coalescing and optional chaining.
I just tested and Terser will convert
v === null || v === undefined
tonull==v
. Personally I would prefer to read the code that explicitly shows that it is checking for both and let my minifier/optimizer worry about generating compact code.Try changing to const === variable. That’s most likely what’s it doing to minimize the risk of accidental assignment.
Wut? This is an automated optimizer. It is not worried about accidental assignment.
I agree it shouldn’t. But I’ve seen linters that automatically change it since they seem to be forcing practical conventions sometimes.
Linters and minifers are completely different tools.
Good point. That’s what I get for shooting from the hip.
Thanks!