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Home/ Questions/Q 974939
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T03:30:28+00:00 2026-05-16T03:30:28+00:00

In Ruby, what is the difference between == and ===? The RDoc says Case

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In Ruby, what is the difference between == and ===? The RDoc says

Case Equality—For class Object,
effectively the same as calling #==,
but typically overridden by
descendents to provide meaningful
semantics in case statements.

Is #== the same as ==? And could you provide an example of when/how this is used in case statements?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T03:30:28+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:30 am

    The two really have nothing to do with each other. In particular, #== is the equality operator and #=== has absolutely nothing to with equality. Personally, I find it rather unfortunate that #=== looks so similar to #==, uses the equals sign and is often called the case equality operator, triple equals operator or threequals operator when it really has nothing to do with equality.

    I call #=== the case subsumption operator (it’s the best I could come up with, I’m open to suggestions, especially from native English speakers).

    The best way to describe a === b is “if I have a drawer labeled a, does it make sense to put b in it?”

    So, for example, Module#=== tests whether b.is_a?(a). If you have Integer === 2, does it make sense to put 2 in a box labeled Integer? Yes, it does. What about Integer === 'hello'? Obviously not.

    Another example is Regexp#===. It tests for a match. Does it make sense to put 'hello' in a box labeled /el+/? Yes, it does.

    For collections such as ranges, Range#=== is defined as a membership test: it makes sense to put an element in a box labeled with a collection if that element is in the collection.

    So, that’s what #=== does: it tests whether the argument can be subsumed under the receiver.

    What does that have to with case expressions? Simple:

    case foo
    when bar
      baz
    end
    

    is the same as

    if bar === foo
      baz
    end
    
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