Strict inequality (!==)
The strict inequality operator (!==
) checks whether its two operands are
not equal, returning a Boolean result. Unlike the inequality
operator, the strict inequality operator always considers operands of different types to
be different.
Syntax
x !== y
Description
The strict inequality operator checks whether its operands are not equal. It is the negation of the strict equality operator so the following two lines will always give the same result:
x !== y
!(x === y)
For details of the comparison algorithm, see the page for the strict equality operator.
Like the strict equality operator, the strict inequality operator will always consider operands of different types to be different:
3 !== "3"; // true
Examples
Comparing operands of the same type
console.log("hello" !== "hello"); // false
console.log("hello" !== "hola"); // true
console.log(3 !== 3); // false
console.log(3 !== 4); // true
console.log(true !== true); // false
console.log(true !== false); // true
console.log(null !== null); // false
Comparing operands of different types
console.log("3" !== 3); // true
console.log(true !== 1); // true
console.log(null !== undefined); // true
Comparing objects
const object1 = {
name: "hello"
}
const object2 = {
name: "hello"
}
console.log(object1 !== object2); // true
console.log(object1 !== object1); // false
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-equality-operators |
Browser compatibility
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