Le 25/09/2012 12:13, Frank Quan a écrit : > Hi, Brendan, thank you for reply. > > > I mean in common understanding, "a>=b" always have the same result > with " a>b || a==b ". Common understanding assumes a and b are numbers. I personally don't know if there is a common understanding of what 'true > "azerty"' could mean.
> But I noticed that in ES5/ES3, there are several cases breaking this rule. > > See the following: > > null == 0 // false > null > 0 // false > > null >= 0 // true > > I was wondering if this is by design. > > And, is it possible to have some change in future versions of ES? Regrettably, no. As a complement to Brendan's response, I recommand you to read the following paragraph https://github.com/DavidBruant/ECMAScript-regrets#web-technologies-are-ugly-and-there-is-no-way-back Changing this in a future version of ECMAScript would "break the web" (break websites that rely on this broken behavior) David _______________________________________________ es-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/es-discuss

