Prefer equal? over == when comparing object_id

This page is not yet available in Spanish. We are working on its translation.
If you have any questions or feedback about our current translation project, feel free to reach out to us!

Metadata

ID: ruby-best-practices/identity-comparison

Language: Ruby

Severity: Info

Category: Best Practices

Description

In Ruby, the rule “Prefer equal? over == when comparing object_id” is important to remember because of how these two comparison methods function. The equal? method checks if the two compared references point to the exact same object, while the == method checks if the values of the two objects are the same.

This rule is crucial because when you are comparing object_id, you are actually interested in whether the two objects are the same object, not whether their values are equal. Using == can lead to unexpected results if two different objects have the same object_id.

To adhere to this rule and maintain good coding practices, always use equal? when comparing object_id. This ensures that you are accurately checking if the two objects are the same. For instance, instead of writing foo.object_id == bar.object_id, you should write foo.equal?(bar). This way, you are properly checking for object identity, not object equality.

Non-Compliant Code Examples

foo.object_id == bar.object_id

Compliant Code Examples

foo.equal?(bar)
https://static.datadoghq.com/static/images/logos/github_avatar.svg https://static.datadoghq.com/static/images/logos/vscode_avatar.svg jetbrains

Seamless integrations. Try Datadog Code Analysis

PREVIEWING: safchain/fix-custom-agent