Spyke
blackn1ghtreply
feddit.uk

Because in reality you're not doing stupid stuff like that in the image. And using Typescript definitely helps.

However I'm always annoyed that the month parameter when constructing a date object is 0 based. So 1st of Jan is

new Date(2024, 0, 1)
10

Looks confusing at first, but I found it nice for accessing a month array.

const months = ["Jan", "Feb", ...];

months[0] === "Jan";

const label = months[date.getMonth()];
1

I got by without it for years, but not that I have it I have no idea how I did it back then.

2
darcyreply
sh.itjust.works

almost forced to for web front end. why you would use it anywhere else, however, i will never know

7

The same reason people drive their car to buy groceries.

You bought it for something where it was the only option, driving 30km to work everyday. But ever since you got it, the trip to the super market is kinda too hot in the summer and too cold in the winter and what if you spontaneously need to buy more than expected?

People learn it for front end dev, and then they use what they know for back end too.

4

I still don't understand the === operator

Edit: I think a more type strict ==? Pretty sure I understand the point of typescript now.

40
lemmy.world

So in JavaScript there’s the assignment

=

and the comparator is

==

Since there’s no types JS will do implicit conversion before comparison when using == in a case like this

if(false == '0'){
    //this is true
}

But with === it doesn’t. It means literally compare these

if(false === '0'){
    //this is false
}else{
    //so this will execute instead 
}

But this, however, will

var someState = false;
 if(someState === false){
    //this is true
}
125
> 1 == 1
true
> 1 == '1'
true
> 1 === '1'
false

(from node REPL)

Basically it's the real equals sign

54
frezikreply
midwest.social

The short answer is that your language needs === when it fucked up the semantics of ==, but it's also too popular and you can't fix it without breaking half the web.

41

Or when it is something like Prolog, where equality is inherently a messy and complex concept.

2
Mikinareply
programming.dev

It's also important if you're checking hashes (at least, it was - if you're using correct hashing algorithm that isn't ancient, you will not have this problem).

Because if you take for example "0e462097431906509019562988736854" (which is md5("240610708"), but also applicable to most other hashing algorithms that hash to a hex string), if("0e462097431906509019562988736854" == 0) is true. So any other data that hashes to any variantion of "0e[1-9]+" will pass the check, for example:

md5("240610708") == md5("hashcatqlffzszeRcrt")

that equals to

"0e462097431906509019562988736854" == "0e242700999142460696437005736231"

which thanks to scientific notation and no strict type checking can also mean

0^462097431906509019562988736854^ == 0^242700999142460696437005736231^

which is

0 == 0 `

I did use md5 as an example because the strings are pretty short, but it's applicable to a whole lot of other hashes. And the problem is that if you use one of the strings that hash to a magic hash in a vulnerable site, it will pass the password check for any user who's password also hashes to a magic hash. There's not really a high chance of that happening, but there's still a lot of hashes that do hash to it.

17

If you're checking passwords, you should be using constant time string checking, anyway.

More likely, you should let your bcrypt library do it for you.

1
kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

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" 
16
lemmy.world

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.

5
kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

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.

2
lemmy.world

Try changing to const === variable. That’s most likely what’s it doing to minimize the risk of accidental assignment.

0
kevincoxreply
lemmy.ml

Wut? This is an automated optimizer. It is not worried about accidental assignment.

3
lemmy.world

I agree it shouldn’t. But I’ve seen linters that automatically change it since they seem to be forcing practical conventions sometimes.

1
lemmy.blahaj.zone

The other comments explains it in pretty good detail, but when I was learning my teacher explained it sort of like a mnemonic.

1 + 1 = 2 is read "one plus one equals two"

1 + 1 == 2 is read "one plus one is equal to two"

1 + 1 === 2 is read "one plus one is really equal to two"

And you hit the nail on the head, is that === is type explicit while == is implicit.

6

I'd use something like:

= becomes

== equals

=== is identical to

It's funny how everyone thinks "equals" in this context should be "identical to" when, in normal language, it doesn't really mean that at all!

3
OpenStarsreply
startrek.website

Reddit: 1+1=your muther (sic, x2)

X: 1+1≈we should violently overthrow the government

4chan: nvm, I don't want to get banned for saying this one

2
sh.itjust.works

It's also very language specific, like Pascal/Delphi also have ":=" for assignments and "=" for comparison, etc

8

I think it's called 'delayed assignment'. So it is almost like =, but you can use arguments to define functions, f[a_]:=a+2.

1

1 + false ? (I have no idea in which order JS would evaluate things as I rarely have to touch that language much anymore)

1