Simple ES6 approach:
const shallowCompare = (obj1, obj2) =>
Object.keys(obj1).length === Object.keys(obj2).length &&
Object.keys(obj1).every(key => obj1[key] === obj2[key]);
Here I added the object keys amount equality checking for the following comparison should fail (an important case that usually does not taken into the account):
shallowCompare({ x: 1, y: 3}, { x: 1, y: 3, a: 1}); // false
2019 Update. Per Andrew Rasmussen' comment we also need to take into account undefined case. The problem with the previous approach is that the following comparison returns true:
({ foo: undefined })['foo'] === ({ bar: undefined })['foo'] // true
So, explicit keys existence check is needed. And it could be done with hasOwnProperty:
const shallowCompare = (obj1, obj2) =>
Object.keys(obj1).length === Object.keys(obj2).length &&
Object.keys(obj1).every(key =>
obj2.hasOwnProperty(key) && obj1[key] === obj2[key]
);