I’ve just been looking at the _.isEqual function of Underscore.js and a section of the code goes something like this:
if (a === b) return true;
if (typeof a !== typeof b) return false;
if (a == b) return true;
I’m just wondering if there’s any case where the third statement could be reached and evaluate to true?
Edit: Just to be clear, this isn’t my own code I’m talking about, I’m reading the source of Underscore, in particular, this line and I was curious about why they’re doing that.
I’ve just been browsing through the Underscore repo and came across a short discussion where someone asked the exact same thing, and it looks like it is actually unnecessary.
Following the algorithm defined by the ECMAScript Language Specification in section 11.9.6 and section 11.9.3 seems to show that no pair of values should return true in the above case.
So, in short, no, that situation is not possible.