# nlohmann::basic_json::operator==
```cpp
bool operator==(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept;
template
bool operator==(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept;
template
bool operator==(ScalarType lhs, const const_reference rhs) noexcept;
```
Compares two JSON values for equality according to the following rules:
- Two JSON values are equal if (1) they are not discarded, (2) they are from the same type, and (3) their stored values
are the same according to their respective `operator==`.
- Integer and floating-point numbers are automatically converted before comparison. Note that two NaN values are always
treated as unequal.
## Template parameters
`ScalarType`
: a scalar type according to `std::is_scalar::value`
## Parameters
`lhs` (in)
: first value to consider
`rhs` (in)
: second value to consider
## Return value
whether the values `lhs` and `rhs` are equal
## Exception safety
No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions.
## Complexity
Linear.
## Notes
!!! note
- NaN values never compare equal to themselves or to other NaN values.
- JSON `#!cpp null` values are all equal.
- Discarded values never compare equal to themselves.
!!! note
Floating-point numbers inside JSON values numbers are compared with `json::number_float_t::operator==` which is
`double::operator==` by default. To compare floating-point while respecting an epsilon, an alternative
[comparison function](https://github.com/mariokonrad/marnav/blob/master/include/marnav/math/floatingpoint.hpp#L34-#L39)
could be used, for instance
```cpp
template::value, T>::type>
inline bool is_same(T a, T b, T epsilon = std::numeric_limits::epsilon()) noexcept
{
return std::abs(a - b) <= epsilon;
}
```
Or you can self-defined operator equal function like this:
```cpp
bool my_equal(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs)
{
const auto lhs_type lhs.type();
const auto rhs_type rhs.type();
if (lhs_type == rhs_type)
{
switch(lhs_type)
// self_defined case
case value_t::number_float:
return std::abs(lhs - rhs) <= std::numeric_limits::epsilon();
// other cases remain the same with the original
...
}
...
}
```
## Examples
??? example
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON types.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/operator__equal.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/operator__equal.output"
```
??? example
The example demonstrates comparing several JSON types against the null pointer (JSON `#!json null`).
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/operator__equal__nullptr_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/operator__equal__nullptr_t.output"
```
## Version history
- Added in version 1.0.0.