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They added Map as a proper key-value data structure so it's a good idea to ban using objects as map data structure now, just like banning any usage of `var` (using only let/const) with "use strict" to prevent implicit usage of that nonsense broken form of scoping with hoisting.
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I don't think it's reasonable to blame Map for objects implementing equality as reference equality. It would be worse if it deviated from the standard definition of equality in the language. Arrays and objects are what need to be fixed, not Map using `===` (it doesn't use `==`).
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They don't need to change Map to fix these problems though. It would be able to work with a new form of arrays and/or operator overloading. Reference equality also wouldn't be the end of the world if it was only a default which could be overridden, like Python3 objects.
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Map doesn't rule out introducing a way for objects to define equality and a hash function in the future like other languages. The initial implementation didn't need to be tied to other major new features. I think they're doing a great job with the terrible base they were given.
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How do you think equality should be defined for arbitrary objects by default, if not reference equality? Nice implementations in other languages either allow overriding the implementation and either have no default or default to reference equality.
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Replying to and
You're complaining about one feature being added before a separate feature which works well with it. They haven't done anything that blocks a proper implementation of custom equality and hashing implementations. That's what I was saying which you've misrepresented as a 'cop out'.
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Replying to and
That's going to be a hard problem for them to solve. Adding Map and Set before solving it didn't make it any harder. The problem exists for every single object type in the language and every library already, for all the operators, including comparison and arithmetic operators.
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