Michał Wadas (2015-01-04T02:16:16.000Z)
It won't help because objects are ALWAYS compared by their identity. valeOf
or toString will be used only in case of comparing object with primitive.
4 sty 2015 03:10 "Salvador de la Puente González" <salva at unoyunodiez.com>
napisał(a):

> Reimplement Object#valueOf() returning a string representation of your
> object.
>
> See
> http://webreflection.blogspot.com.es/2010/10/javascript-coercion-demystified.html?m=1
>
> Hope it helps.
> On 4 Jan 2015 02:53, "Soni L." <fakedme+es at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>  I've been looking and looking and looking and I couldn't find a way to
>> override == to make 2 different instances of MyPoint compare == if they
>> have the same coordinates. (I guess this also applies to String objects
>> and stuff but I haven't tested that)
>>
>> So how do I do this?
>>
>> (PS: yes, I know, Java has an .equals method, not overridable ==, but
>> it's basically the same thing)
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> es-discuss at mozilla.org
>> https://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/es-discuss
>>
>>
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d at domenic.me (2015-01-12T21:26:31.328Z)
It won't help because objects are ALWAYS compared by their identity. valeOf
or toString will be used only in case of comparing object with primitive.