Learn JavaScript
  • Introduction
  • Basics
    • Comments
    • Variables
    • Types
    • Equality
  • Numbers
    • Creation
    • Basic Operators
    • Advanced Operators
  • Strings
    • Creation
    • Concatenation
    • Length
  • Conditional Logic
    • If
    • Else
    • Comparators
    • Concatenate
  • Arrays
    • Indices
    • Length
  • Loops
    • For
    • While
    • Do...While
  • Functions
    • Declare
    • Higher order
  • Objects
    • Creation
    • Properties
    • Mutable
    • Reference
    • Prototype
    • Delete
    • Enumeration
    • Global footprint
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  1. Conditional Logic

Comparators

Lets now focus on the conditional part:

if (country === "France") {
    ...
}

The conditional part is the variable country followed by the three equal signs (===). Three equal signs tests if the variable country has both the correct value (France) and also the correct type (String). You can test conditions with double equal signs, too, however a conditional such as if (x == 5) would then return true for both var x = 5; and var x = "5";. Depending on what your program is doing, this could make quite a difference. It is highly recommended as a best practice that you always compare equality with three equal signs (=== and !==) instead of two (== and !=).

Other conditional test:

  • x > a: is x bigger than a?

  • x < a: is x less than a?

  • x <= a: is x less than or equal to a?

  • x >=a: is x greater than or equal to a?

  • x != a: is x not a?

  • x: does x exist?

Logical Comparison

In order to avoid the if-else hassle, simple logical comparisons can be utilised.

var topper = marks > 85 ? "YES" : "NO";

In the above example, ? is a logical operator. The code says that if the value of marks is greater than 85 i.e. marks > 85 , then topper = YES ; otherwise topper = NO . Basically, if the comparison condition proves true, the first argument is accessed and if the comparison condition is false , the second argument is accessed.

PreviousElseNextConcatenate

Last updated 4 years ago