I recently discovered that 2 == [2]
in JavaScript. As it turns out, this quirk has a couple of interesting consequences:
var a = [0, 1, 2, 3];
a[[2]] === a[2]; // this is true
Similarly, the following works:
var a = { "abc" : 1 };
a[["abc"]] === a["abc"]; // this is also true
Even stranger still, this works as well:
[[[[[[[2]]]]]]] == 2; // this is true too! WTF?
These behaviors seem consistent across all browsers.
Any idea why this is a language feature?
Here are more insane consequences of this "feature":
[0] == false // true
if ([0]) { /* executes */ } // [0] is both true and false!
var a = [0];
a == a // true
a == !a // also true, WTF?
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