What is deep-eql?
The deep-eql package is a deep equality testing library that allows developers to compare two values for structural equality, rather than just reference equality. It is useful for testing and assertions when you need to ensure that two complex objects, arrays, or other nested structures are equivalent in content.
What are deep-eql's main functionalities?
Deep Equality Check
This feature allows you to check if two objects are deeply equal, meaning their structure and nested values are equivalent.
const deepEql = require('deep-eql');
const obj1 = { a: 1, b: { c: 2 } };
const obj2 = { a: 1, b: { c: 2 } };
console.log(deepEql(obj1, obj2)); // true
Custom Type Comparisons
This feature allows you to provide a custom comparator function to define equality for specific types or instances.
const deepEql = require('deep-eql');
class Person {
constructor(name) {
this.name = name;
}
}
const person1 = new Person('Alice');
const person2 = new Person('Alice');
console.log(deepEql(person1, person2, { comparator: (a, b) => a.name === b.name })); // true
Other packages similar to deep-eql
lodash.isequal
Lodash's isEqual function performs a deep comparison between two values to determine if they are equivalent. It is similar to deep-eql but is part of the larger Lodash utility library, which offers a wide range of functions for manipulating and comparing data.
chai
Chai is a BDD / TDD assertion library for node and the browser that can be delightfully paired with any javascript testing framework. It includes a deep equality assertion, similar to deep-eql, as part of its extensive assertion library.
deep-equal
This package provides a function for deep equality checks, similar to deep-eql. It is a standalone library that focuses solely on deep equality without additional dependencies or utilities.
Improved deep equality testing for node and the browser.
What is Deep-Eql?
Deep Eql is a module which you can use to determine if two objects are "deeply" equal - that is, rather than having referential equality (a === b
), this module checks an object's keys recursively, until it finds primitives to check for referential equality. For more on equality in JavaScript, read the comparison operators article on mdn.
As an example, take the following:
1 === 1
1 == '1'
{ a: 1 } !== { a: 1 }
{ a: 1 } != { a: 1 }
var deepEql = require("deep-eql");
deepEql({ a: 1 }, { a: 1 }) === true
Installation
Node.js
deep-eql
is available on npm.
$ npm install deep-eql
Usage
The primary export of deep-eql
is function that can be given two objects to compare. It will always return a boolean which can be used to determine if two objects are deeply equal.
Rules
- Strict equality for non-traversable nodes according to
Object.is
:
eql(NaN, NaN).should.be.true;
eql(-0, +0).should.be.false;
- All own and inherited enumerable properties are considered:
eql(Object.create({ foo: { a: 1 } }), Object.create({ foo: { a: 1 } })).should.be.true;
eql(Object.create({ foo: { a: 1 } }), Object.create({ foo: { a: 2 } })).should.be.false;
- When comparing
Error
objects, only name
, message
, and code
properties are considered, regardless of enumerability:
eql(Error('foo'), Error('foo')).should.be.true;
eql(Error('foo'), Error('bar')).should.be.false;
eql(Error('foo'), TypeError('foo')).should.be.false;
eql(Object.assign(Error('foo'), { code: 42 }), Object.assign(Error('foo'), { code: 42 })).should.be.true;
eql(Object.assign(Error('foo'), { code: 42 }), Object.assign(Error('foo'), { code: 13 })).should.be.false;
eql(Object.assign(Error('foo'), { otherProp: 42 }), Object.assign(Error('foo'), { otherProp: 13 })).should.be.true;
- Arguments are not Arrays:
eql([], arguments).should.be.false;
eql([], Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments)).should.be.true;