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21:46
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A: Concept: Comparing objects and arrays like atrings and numbers in JavaScript [ę“šlosed]

Danny BullisJavascript hashes objects in memory with unique memory pointers. You're essentially creating two separate objects, and trying to compare them. Despite the fact that they look similar, they in fact are different. Try storing the object as a variable first, and then testing against that variable. ...

Alright, it worked.
Still, It would be cool if there was a way to allow this.
Yeah, it's by creating a variable and using that, since it ensures you are using the same object reference.
Please mark correct if it's correct :)
it's "correct" but not what I was looking for. Thanks though
Please mark it correct if it's correct so that others who may stumble upon this question will know the solution is resolved. You cannot achieve what you're asking for any other way. Not sure what else you're "looking for."
Alright. I set it as the correct answer but it's still not really the answer. I was asking if you could compare literal objects, not how to avoid it as if it were a "mistake"
21:46
Ah, I see you've edited your original post quite a bit, sorry about that. My recommendation would be to use a hash function to hash both objects and then compare the hashes. github.com/puleos/object-hash You could also try to stringify the entire object, strip out all whitespace and generate a checksum for each of the objects. If the checksums match, they are the same object.
yeah, just a bit of clarification :P
Gotcha
So I've done something similar before
I had a client-side editor where the user could edit the values of a javascript object and persist those changes to a database. I needed some way of knowing when the object had been modified. Similar to when you edit a Word document, you get the "*" character in the filename.
Tell me if you can access this ^
404
I'm actually making a JavaScript library called Js10
thats what that whole thing was about
21:52
Gotcha
It's a private repo. Oh well. Anyway, did you get what I was saying about generating a checksum?
I'm looking for the snippet and 3rd party library I used to generate a checksum. Basically an md5 hash of a stringified object.
Yeah
Oh, forgot to share the link
interesting
See, I want a library that isn't as massive as jQuery, but with a rivaling versatility. So far, I've only written 1/100th of the functions. See, each of those top-level functions will have their own "functions"
the data method's first argument is always a number
that number correlates to the mini-function within
ah, nice. clever
then, the other parameters (b, c, d) are used for the actual methods
yeah, took me a while to come up with
21:57
so you need to remember which number you're calling?
Yes, but it will all be referenced in the unminified version
Also, they'll be a help function
which you input the function name as a parameter and it spits out different usage
so where does the object comparison come in?
one sec
so far, 1 sub-function has been made. With that, you can do four different methods
method 1: invert
a = true; a.data(0);
you invoke it by only using the 0
it inverts the input
method 2: define the undefined
if the input is undefined, then return an alternative output to define it.
This is useful for polyfill, you dont have to do the whole checking if its defined thing
as well as other stuff also
22:02
still not seeing where the actual object comparison comes in. Your example used {a: "x"} ==? {a: "x"}
maybe that's changed :P
im getting to it :P
a = "somefunction"; a.data(0, function () { /* code */ };
if window["somefunction"] isnt defined, then it returns the second parameter. if its defined already, then it returns itself.
heres where some comparison comes in
the 4th function is an oscillator, where there's two values, and inputting one of the values outputs the other one, and vice versa.
example:

lightswitch = "on"
lightswitch.data(0, "on", "off");
that will return "off" since the value is "on"
now we can do
lightswitch = lightswitch.data(0, "on", "off")
and after calling the function with lightswitch again, it changes it back to on
very useful for say, using one key to pause a video. example
pausestatus = "pause"
video.onkeydown = function (a) {
  if (a.which == 13) video[pausestatus.data(0, "play", "pause")]();
}
so there
cya i gues

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