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Conditional Operator '?'
let a = 10; console.log( (a < 5) ? "a is less than 5" : (a = 5) ? "a is equal to 5" : "a is greater than 5" ); //Why the output is not "a is equal to 5" but not "a is greater than 5"
4 Respostas
+ 4
AJ #Level 20 End Game No, output is "a is equal to 5"
Rest are correct, but single equal sign(=) assigned a's value to 5, where double equal sign(==) checks whether the operands' values are equal.
Copy that and check this in the playground
+ 3
Look above example like this.
x = (a< 5) ? y : ((a = 5) ? z : w);
Here is 2 ternary operator so in first ternery operator a < 5 is false so output will be
(a = 5) ? z : w //here a = 5 false so output will be w
= w
= 'a is greater than 5'
Edited : here a = 5 not a == 5 so answer will be 'a is equal to 5'
+ 2
Farhan Yes I got because here a = 5 not a == 5.
Thanks
+ 1
The problem was the condition itself. Instead of '=' I was supposed to use '==' after which the code worked as intended.
Thanks for answering.