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08:20
39
Q: In JavaScript how can you have the statement: if(a ==1 && a== 2 && a==3) evaluate to true?

Dimpu Aravind BuddhaIs it ever possible that if(a ==1 && a== 2 && a==3) could evaluate to true? in JavaScript? This is interview question asked by one of the major tech company. My answer was it's impossible. They said nothing is impossible. It happened 2 weeks back, but I'm still trying to find the answer. I know ...

No, it's not possible.
If it is possible, I certainly wouldn't want to see anybody on my team write it or rely on it in any real code.
The answer is "that's why linters have === rules".
@MihaiAlexandru-Ionut I don't think it's an opinion that a cannot be 3 different numbers at once
@MihaiAlexandru-Ionut in my opinion, something that's mathematically impossible is not likely to happen ever.
08:20
I think this is more about some obscure gotcha in type comparison rules, which is something of an interesting question, if an answer other than "no" should exist. The way it's posed though it belongs more on puzzling.stackexchange.com.
@Pointy, yes, it's mathematically impossible.
@deceze is possibly right, although I can't figure out how the answer could be yes. Either way, it's an awful interview question. I wouldn't expect anyone but code golfers to know the answer.
@Mihai Mathematically yes, but have you used Javascript…?! ;)
@deceze , can you provide one example ?
I must say that's a stupid interview question designed mostly to make the questioner feel superior. You should have discussed the difference between == and === and explained some of the nuances of type conversion and then just explained that you use === nearly all the time except in rare cases where you want a type conversion to be allowed.
08:20
@Mihai Just generally destroyallsoftware.com/talks/wat
Yes, this is certainly possible.
@Kevin Pray tell^H^H Post an answer.
Funny how this question went from -10 to 19 votes in a matter of hours.
@Alex That's really interesting. I wonder why that is.
08:20
@deceze I would suggest that it's an indirect way of trying to find out whether the interviewee realizes what kind of utter madness JS is. I consider whether it's a good way of doing so to be an open question.
It's trivial in C (#define a ++i) , C++ (operator overloading), or Swift (same). Don't know JavaScript well enough. As an interview question, it's utter rubbish.
well... the purpose of this kind of question is two fold. do you know the answer, and if not, how do you react to not knowing the answer. but i tend to agree, it’s not a great interview question. i don’t think making the interviewee uncomfortable should be a goal of an interview question.
Questions should be limited to things a qualified developer would know, not gotchas based on things qualified developers wouldn't use anyway.
pts
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It's also possible in other languages (e.g. C++, Python, Ruby), by making a of a class with operator == overridden.
be thankful you didn't get the job. If someone asked me and gave me "nothing is impossible", I would immediately have no interest in continuing with the interview.
It's not even mathematically impossible; this is valid, for example, in arithmetic mod 1 ...
08:20
I know it’s farfetched, but this question is too. Is it possible this happens as a result of concurrence?
Given the number of solutions posted so far, this is starting to look like the sort of thing that would be posted on PPCG.
...and thus, WASM was born, and lo the mighty exodus commenced..
 
5 hours later…
13:31
Am I the only one who thinks this is actually a good interview question? it checks: love for formality, actual in-depth knowledge, interest in technical excellence, handling of a difficult situation etc. In a different field, a colleague was asked a similarly obscure technical question and their response was "is this important? things like that never happen." Well, they do. To the OP: kudos for staying with the question, it shows an inquisitive mind. You will hear from them again.
14:09
I think the best answer might be "not in the code that I write".
@mirnis If the person knew the answer, yes that would show extremely in depth knowledge of the language. However, you'd probably ask dozens of people without getting a working answer (this question had a ton of attention before an answer was posted). An incorrect answer doesn't help you with your hiring decision, and this question wastes precious time every time you get a wrong answer. It could show you how they approach difficult problems, but it's not a good test of knowledge.
 
1 hour later…
15:23
it looks like a modified dupe of stackoverflow.com/questions/45754928/…
 
1 hour later…
16:33
state-changing toString() is bad. Your debugger hates you.
16:46
@Joshua, it was more a question what is possible, not what is advisable.

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