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--description--

Strict equality (===) is the counterpart to the equality operator (==). However, unlike the equality operator, which attempts to convert both values being compared to a common type, the strict equality operator does not perform a type conversion.

If the values being compared have different types, they are considered unequal, and the strict equality operator will return false.

Examples

3 ===  3  // true
3 === '3' // false

In the second example, 3 is a Number type and '3' is a String type.

--instructions--

Use the strict equality operator in the if statement so the function will return the string Equal when val is strictly equal to 7.

--hints--

testStrict(10) should return the string Not Equal

assert(testStrict(10) === 'Not Equal');

testStrict(7) should return the string Equal

assert(testStrict(7) === 'Equal');

testStrict("7") should return the string Not Equal

assert(testStrict('7') === 'Not Equal');

You should use the === operator

assert(__helpers.removeJSComments(code).match(/(val\s*===\s*\d+)|(\d+\s*===\s*val)/g).length > 0);

--seed--

--seed-contents--

// Setup
function testStrict(val) {
if (val) { // Change this line
return "Equal";
}
return "Not Equal";
}

testStrict(10);

--solutions--

function testStrict(val) {
if (val === 7) {
return "Equal";
}
return "Not Equal";
}