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Amit Shekhar
Amit Shekhar

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at outcomeschool.com

Difference between == and === in Kotlin

Hi, I am Amit Shekhar, Co-Founder @ Outcome School • IIT 2010-14 • I have taught and mentored many developers, and their efforts landed them high-paying tech jobs, helped many tech companies in solving their unique problems, and created many open-source libraries being used by top companies. I am passionate about sharing knowledge through open-source, blogs, and videos.

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In this blog, we will learn about the difference between == and === in Kotlin.

This article was originally published at Outcome School.

In Kotlin, we have two types of equality:

  • Structural equality (==): It checks for equals().
  • Referential equality (===): It checks whether the two references point to the same object.

Let's learn about these two equalities in Kotlin with examples.

Suppose we have a class as below:

class Car(val color: String) {

}
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Note: This is NOT a data class. So, it will not implement the equals() method by default.

First, let's first compare Structural equality.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("BLUE")
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

false
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It outputs false and it is obvious.

Let's take another example.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("RED")
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

false
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It also outputs false even though the color of both cars is the same because we have not implemented the equals() method.

Let’s take another example.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = car1
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

true
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It outputs true as the references to both objects are the same now, no need of checking for the equals() method implementation.

Now, compare Referential equality.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("RED")
println(car1 === car2)
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The output:

false
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It outputs false as the references to both objects are different.

Another example:

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = car1
println(car1 === car2)
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The output:

true
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It outputs true as the references to both objects are the same now.

Till now, we have NOT implemented the equals() method, there are two ways to implement equals() method:

  1. Making the class a data class.
  2. Adding our own equals() method implementation.

Both will behave the same. So, let's go with the data class.

As our class Car was not a data class. Now, let's make our class a data class.

data class Car(val color: String) {

}
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When we make it a data class, it implements equals() method internally.

Now, let's first compare Structural equality.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("BLUE")
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

false
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It outputs false that is obvious.

Let's take another example.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("RED")
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

true
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It outputs true as the color of both cars is the same and we have made the class a data class that implements the equals() method.

Let’s take another example.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = car1
println(car1 == car2)
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The output:

true
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It outputs true as the references to both objects are the same now, no need of checking for the equals() method implementation although it is a data class. The output will be the same even if it was not a data class as we have seen earlier.

Now, compare Referential equality. It has no impact due to the data class.

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = Car("RED")
println(car1 === car2)
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The output:

false
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It outputs false as the references to both objects are different.

Another example:

val car1 = Car("RED")
val car2 = car1
println(car1 === car2)
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The output:

true
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It outputs true as the references to both objects are the same now.

Now, we know the difference between == and === in Kotlin.

Watch the video format: Difference between == and === in Kotlin

Master Kotlin Coroutines from here: Mastering Kotlin Coroutines

That's it for now.

Thanks

Amit Shekhar

Co-Founder @ Outcome School

You can connect with me on:

Read all of my high-quality blogs here.

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