205

I'm personally an advocate of the ternary operator: () ? :

I do realize that it has its place, but I have come across many programmers that are completely against ever using it, and some that use it too often.

What are your feelings on it? What interesting code have you seen using it?

4
  • 9
    Use it when it's clear, avoid it when it confuses. That's a judgment call. It can make code more readable, but only for simple expressions. Trying to always use it is just as much a menace as relentlessly avoiding it.
    – Abel
    Nov 5, 2009 at 4:40
  • 4
    Actually, it's the conditional operator. A close-to-duplicate question is stackoverflow.com/questions/725973/…. Oct 28, 2011 at 22:22
  • I was sometimes using x = x if x else y but then asked about it and realized with others help that it really just reduces to x = x or y (stackoverflow.com/questions/18199381/self-referencing-ternary/…)
    – Scruffy
    Aug 14, 2013 at 13:45
  • The ternary operator can be used in places where the if..else construct can't, for example in return statements, and as function arguments. The same could be achieved without ternary use, but results in longer code and larger executables. Mar 1, 2016 at 3:02

54 Answers 54

269

Use it for simple expressions only:

int a = (b > 10) ? c : d;

Don't chain or nest ternary operators as it hard to read and confusing:

int a = b > 10 ? c < 20 ? 50 : 80 : e == 2 ? 4 : 8;

Moreover, when using ternary operator, consider formatting the code in a way that improves readability:

int a = (b > 10) ? some_value                 
                 : another_value;
13
  • 100
    Totally agree with the first few statements but totally disagree with your example of "improved readability". If you're going for multi-line why not just use an if statement? Oct 2, 2009 at 2:19
  • 5
    just because if else is a quite more verbose for simple decisions: int a = 0; if(b > 10) a = some_value; else a = another_value; What do you prefer? Oct 5, 2009 at 17:34
  • 48
    @d03boy: Because if-statement is just that, a statement, and won't do when all you want is an expression.
    – falstro
    Feb 16, 2010 at 19:10
  • 2
    @roe in some languages if is expression (e.g. in Scala), so val x = if(true) 0 else 1 is perfectly legal
    – om-nom-nom
    Dec 4, 2012 at 21:07
  • 6
    @om-nom-nom case in point, that would make it an if-expression, rather than an if-statement, and is essentially the same thing as the ?:-operator.
    – falstro
    Dec 7, 2012 at 15:59
161

It makes debugging slightly more difficult since you can not place breakpoints on each of the sub expressions. I use it rarely.

2
  • 61
    That's the best argument against the ternary operator I ever heard. I don't buy the "not readable" argument (it sounds to me like people being too lazy to get used to it) but this actually has substance. May 3, 2010 at 1:03
  • 5
    If you're doing anything inside a ternary that requires debugging, then it's probably being used wrong. Ternaries should be for simple assignment IMO. If you need to step through the ternary, and seeing the value of the assignment afterwards is not enough, the ternary is NOT your actual problem. It's the complexity of the operation. Make it an if statement at that point.
    – Julian
    Oct 9, 2020 at 15:19
82

I love them, especially in type-safe languages.

I don't see how this:

int count = (condition) ? 1 : 0;

is any harder than this:

int count;

if (condition)
{
  count = 1;
}
else
{
  count = 0;
}

I'd argue that ternary operators make everything less complex and more neat than the alternative.

6
  • 6
    Ternary initialization is even more useful in D or C++ when the variable is constant. eg const int count = ...;
    – deft_code
    Feb 15, 2011 at 16:51
  • Well, you're kind of misrepresenting if/else with the unneeded braces there.
    – bobobobo
    Dec 20, 2012 at 23:12
  • 1
    Also, in this case if condition is bool you could just do int count = condition;
    – bobobobo
    Dec 20, 2012 at 23:14
  • 1
    @bobobobo this if/else with braces is how the majority of programmers will rewrite the ternary.. Mar 25, 2014 at 21:12
  • 2
    @bobobobo if/else w/o braces is just asking for trouble. It's far too easy for someone to add a line, but forget that it'll then need braces to do what they expect (execute the additional line as part of a block): stackoverflow.com/a/381274/377225 Mar 9, 2019 at 2:32
48

Chained I'm fine with - nested, not so much.

I tend to use them more in C simply because they're an if statement that has value, so it cuts down on unnecessary repetition or variables:

x = (y < 100) ? "dog" :
    (y < 150) ? "cat" :
    (y < 300) ? "bar" : "baz";

rather than

     if (y < 100) { x = "dog"; }
else if (y < 150) { x = "cat"; }
else if (y < 300) { x = "bar"; }
else              { x = "baz"; }

In assignments like this, I find it's less to refactor, and clearer.

When I'm working in ruby on the other hand, I'm more likely to use if...else...end because it's an expression too.

x =   if (y < 100) then "dog"
    elif (y < 150) then "cat"
    elif (y < 300) then "bar"
    else                "baz"
    end

(Although, admittedly, for something this simple, I might just use the ternary operator anyway.)

1
  • I know it's more wordy, but the second example is more readable to me than the first.
    – Chrisuu
    Jan 1, 2023 at 4:34
41

The ternary ?: operator is merely a functional equivalent of the procedural if construct. So as long as you are not using nested ?: expressions, the arguments for/against the functional representation of any operation applies here. But nesting ternary operations can result in code that is downright confusing (exercise for the reader: try writing a parser that will handle nested ternary conditionals and you will appreciate their complexity).

But there are plenty of situations where conservative use of the ?: operator can result in code that is actually easier to read than otherwise. For example:

int compareTo(Object object) {
    if((isLessThan(object) && reverseOrder) || (isGreaterThan(object) && !reverseOrder)) {
       return 1;
    if((isLessThan(object) && !reverseOrder) || (isGreaterThan(object) && reverseOrder)) {
       return -1;
    else
      return 0;
}

Now compare that with this:

int compareTo(Object object) {
    if(isLessThan(object))
        return reverseOrder ? 1 : -1;
    else(isGreaterThan(object))
        return reverseOrder ? -1 : 1;
    else
       return 0;
}

As the code is more compact, there is less syntactic noise, and by using the ternary operator judiciously (that is only in relation with the reverseOrder property) the end result isn't particularly terse.

2
  • i would still advocate using accolades on every if/then/else construction that is not ternary tho, so your second example is missing a few imho.
    – Kris
    May 27, 2009 at 14:05
  • Yes, it is functional. It's like a tiny function that has a single boolean argument and, returns any type you want! Actually a neat operator.
    – bobobobo
    Feb 19, 2012 at 17:38
24

It's a question of style, really; the subconscious rules I tend to follow are:

  • Only evaluate 1 expression - so foo = (bar > baz) ? true : false, but NOT foo = (bar > baz && lotto && someArray.Contains(someValue)) ? true : false
  • If I'm using it for display logic, e.g. <%= (foo) ? "Yes" : "No" %>
  • Only really use it for assignment; never flow logic (so never (foo) ? FooIsTrue(foo) : FooIsALie(foo) ) Flow logic in ternary is itself a lie, ignore that last point.

I like it because it's concise and elegant for simple assignment operations.

4
  • In C# you can use it for flow control if you're assigning a delegate from within the ternary, and then invoking it afterwards. Well, that's kind of flow control... Oct 30, 2008 at 4:48
  • 25
    Your two first examples are really bad. The results of comparisons are already boolean values, so your ternary operators are useless and only complicate the code.
    – Trillian
    Nov 8, 2009 at 16:51
  • 1
    @Trillian +1 Yes, should have gone with a different assignment. foo = (bar > baz); is much simpler
    – Eric
    Jan 27, 2012 at 14:09
  • For the case of the boolean return with a bunch of clauses, I like to break the requirements up into smaller bits using the ternary conditional, kind of like when you refactor by using early returns to simplify code. return bar <= baz ? false ! lotto ? false : someArray.Contains(someValue )
    – daotoad
    Mar 4, 2019 at 19:20
18

Like so many opinion questions, the answer is inevitably: it depends

For something like:

return x ? "Yes" : "No";

I think that is much more concise (and quicker for me to parse) than:

if (x) {
    return "Yes";
} else {
    return "No";
}

Now if your conditional expression is complex, then the ternary operation is not a good choice. Something like:

x && y && z >= 10 && s.Length == 0 || !foo

is not a good candidate for the ternary operator.

As an aside, if you are a C programmer, GCC actually has an extension that allows you to exclude the if-true portion of the ternary, like this:

/* 'y' is a char * */
const char *x = y ? : "Not set";

Which will set x to y assuming y is not NULL. Good stuff.

4
  • Fixed slight syntax and grammar prob, Sean :-) Missing y from last bit of code and "assign x to y" means "y = x", so I chgd to "set x to y".
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 11, 2009 at 1:55
  • @Pax: Thanks! I rolled back the syntax change since I was trying to point out that with GCC extensions you don't need the if-true portion of the ternary. Feb 11, 2009 at 1:56
  • Sorry, didn't see that paragraph. Don't know that I agree with that sort of stuff though since it allows people to write code that won't compile with a ISO-standard compiler. Still, when GCC is the last man standing, that won't matter :-)
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 11, 2009 at 2:00
  • It is voodoo, for sure... And who doesn't use GCC? :D Feb 11, 2009 at 2:01
14

In my mind, it only makes sense to use the ternary operator in cases where an expression is needed.

In other cases, it seems like the ternary operator decreases clarity.

1
  • the problem being that is 99% of the language, an expression can be replaced by a function ... and ppl avoiding the ternary operator will even prefer that solution.
    – PierreBdR
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:32
11

I use the ternary operator wherever I can, unless it makes the code extremely hard to read, but then that's usually just an indication that my code could use a little refactoring.

It always puzzles me how some people think the ternary operator is a "hidden" feature or is somewhat mysterious. It's one of the first things I learnt when I start programming in C, and I don't think it decreases readability at all. It's a natural part of the language.

2
  • 2
    It can cause readability issues, especially when nested. Jan 7, 2009 at 22:53
  • I think "extremely hard to read" is a bit too permissive, but overall I agree with you. There's nothing difficult or mystical about it. May 3, 2010 at 1:05
11

By the measure of cyclomatic complexity, the use of if statements or the ternary operator are equivalent. So by that measure, the answer is no, the complexity would be exactly the same as before.

By other measures such as readability, maintainability, and DRY (don't repeat yourself), either choice may prove better than the other.

10

I use it quite often in places where I'm constrained to work in a constructor - for example, the new .NET 3.5 LINQ to XML constructs - to define default values when an optional parameter is null.

Contrived example:

var e = new XElement("Something",
    param == null ? new XElement("Value", "Default")
                  : new XElement("Value", param.ToString())
);

or (thanks asterite)

var e = new XElement("Something",
    new XElement("Value",
        param == null ? "Default"
                      : param.ToString()
    )
);

No matter whether you use the ternary operator or not, making sure your code is readable is the important thing. Any construct can be made unreadable.

1
  • Or... var e = new XElement("Something", new XElement("value", param == null ? "Default" : param.toString()));
    – asterite
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:36
8

I agree with jmulder: it shouldn't be used in place of a if, but it has its place for return expression or inside an expression:

echo "Result: " + n + " meter" + (n != 1 ? "s" : "");
return a == null ? "null" : a;

The former is just an example, and better internationalisation and localisation support of plural should be used!

0
6

If you're using the ternary operator for a simple conditional assignment I think it's fine. I've seen it (ab)used to control program flow without even making an assignment, and I think that should be avoided. Use an if statement in these cases.

6

(Hack of the day)

#define IF(x) x ?
#define ELSE :

Then you can do if-then-else as expression:

int b = IF(condition1)    res1
        ELSE IF(condition2)  res2
        ELSE IF(conditions3) res3
        ELSE res4;
1
5

I think the ternary operator should be used when needed. It is obviously a very subjective choice, but I find that a simple expression (specially as a return expression) is much clearer than a full test. Example in C/C++:

return (a>0)?a:0;

Compared to:

if(a>0) return a;
else return 0;

You also have the case where the solution is between the ternary operator and creating a function. For example in Python:

l = [ i if i > 0 else 0 for i in lst ]

The alternative is:

def cap(value):
    if value > 0:
        return value
    return 0
l = [ cap(i) for i in lst ]

It is needed enough that in Python (as an example), such an idiom could be seen regularly:

l = [ ((i>0 and [i]) or [0])[0] for i in lst ]

this line uses properties of the logical operators in Python: they are lazy and returns the last value computed if it is equal to the final state.

0
5

I've seen such beasts like (it was actually much worse since it was isValidDate and checked month and day as well, but I couldn't be bothered trying to remember the whole thing):

isLeapYear =
    ((yyyy % 400) == 0)
    ? 1
    : ((yyyy % 100) == 0)
        ? 0
        : ((yyyy % 4) == 0)
            ? 1
            : 0;

where, plainly, a series of if-statements would have been better (although this one's still better than the macro version I once saw).

I don't mind it for small things like:

reportedAge = (isFemale && (Age >= 21)) ? 21 + (Age - 21) / 3 : Age;

or even slightly tricky things like:

printf ("Deleted %d file%s\n", n, (n == 1) ? "" : "s");
1
  • How can you say a series of isolating if statements would be more readable? I read your "beast" just fine. reportedAge is the example that takes some some figuring--probably because it's more of a particular case than figuring out isThisYearALeapYear
    – Axeman
    Mar 11, 2011 at 15:08
4

I like using the operator in debug code to print error values so I don't have to look them up all the time. Usually I do this for debug prints that aren't going to remain once I'm done developing.

int result = do_something();
if( result != 0 )
{
  debug_printf("Error while doing something, code %x (%s)\n", result,
                result == 7 ? "ERROR_YES" :
                result == 8 ? "ERROR_NO" :
                result == 9 ? "ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND" :
                "Unknown");
}
2
4

I almost never use the ternary operator, because whenever I do use it, it always makes me think a lot more than I have to later when I try to maintain it.

I like to avoid verbosity, but when it makes the code a lot easier to pick up, I will go for the verbosity.

Consider:

String name = firstName;

if (middleName != null) {
    name += " " + middleName;
}

name += " " + lastName;

Now, that is a bit verbose, but I find it a lot more readable than:

String name = firstName + (middleName == null ? "" : " " + middleName)
    + " " + lastName;

Or:

String name = firstName;
name += (middleName == null ? "" : " " + middleName);
name += " " + lastName;

It just seems to compress too much information into too little space, without making it clear what's going on. Every time I saw the ternary operator used, I have always found an alternative that seemed much easier to read... then again, that is an extremely subjective opinion, so if you and your colleagues find ternary very readable, go for it.

2
  • 1
    That's not exactly the same thing though. In the second example you're compressing all three statements into one line. That is what decreases readability, not the ternary operator.
    – ilitirit
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:54
  • Fair enough, I updated to incorporate your comment, but it still just feels cluttered to me... but again, it's subjective... I'm not saying ternary is not readable, I'm saying it's not readable to me (99% of the time)
    – Mike Stone
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:57
4

I like them. I don't know why, but I feel very cool when I use the ternary expression.

0
3

I treat ternary operators a lot like GOTO. They have their place, but they are something which you should usually avoid to make the code easier to understand.

3

Well, the syntax for it is horrid. I find functional ifs very useful, and they often makes code more readable.

I would suggest making a macro to make it more readable, but I'm sure someone can come up with a horrible edge case (as there always is with C++).

3
  • many BASIC implementations and variants have an IF function that takes the place of the ternary operator. I have seen a number of codebases with that defined as a macro in C.
    – Sparr
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:50
  • Well, I was thinking of functional programming languages, but yes.
    – Marcin
    Oct 1, 2008 at 23:59
  • "Making a macro to make it more readable," you're quite the joker!
    – niXar
    Jan 7, 2009 at 23:21
3

I typically use it in things like this:

before:

if(isheader)
    drawtext(x, y, WHITE, string);
else
    drawtext(x, y, BLUE, string);

after:

    drawtext(x, y, isheader == true ? WHITE : BLUE, string);
4
  • Of course in most languages, you wouldn't need the "==true" part of that ternary either. Oct 2, 2008 at 3:16
  • I realize that, although I tend to put it in just to make the code more readable since the compiler should optimize it to the same thing as without the ==true anyways
    – KPexEA
    Oct 2, 2008 at 16:49
  • in no language can you possibly need "==true"
    – niXar
    Jan 7, 2009 at 23:13
  • I had hard times deciding whether to upvote or not. The example is nice but the ==TRUE is something I can't stand seeing in other people's code. Jan 21, 2010 at 10:40
3

As others have pointed out they are nice for short simple conditions. I especially like them for defaults (kind of like the || and or usage in JavaScript and Python), e.g.

int repCount = pRepCountIn ? *pRepCountIn : defaultRepCount;

Another common use is to initialize a reference in C++. Since references have to be declared and initialized in the same statement you can't use an if statement.

SomeType& ref = pInput ? *pInput : somethingElse;
1
  • 2
    Amazing that this is the first mention of initialising references, which is one of the few places where "if" cannot be used instead of ?:. (I guess because this is not a C++-specific question...) They are also useful in constructor initialisation lists, for the same reason. Feb 11, 2009 at 4:26
2

I like Groovy's special case of the ternary operator, called the Elvis operator: ?:

expr ?: default

This code evaluates to expr if it's not null, and default if it is. Technically it's not really a ternary operator, but it's definitely related to it and saves a lot of time/typing.

1
2

I recently saw a variation on ternary operators (well, sort of) that make the standard "() ? :" variant seem to be a paragon of clarity:

var Result = [CaseIfFalse, CaseIfTrue][(boolean expression)]

or, to give a more tangible example:

var Name = ['Jane', 'John'][Gender == 'm'];

Mind you, this is JavaScript, so things like that might not be possible in other languages (thankfully).

1
  • 1
    wow, that's awful! imagine nesting a couple of those together! The only vaguely useful thing I can see with that is if you had a function which returned a 2-element array: var Name = getNames()[Gender == 'm']; ...but that's even LESS readable!
    – nickf
    Oct 2, 2008 at 2:03
2

Only when:

$var = (simple > test ? simple_result_1 : simple_result_2);

KISS.

0
2

For simple if cases, I like to use it. Actually it's much easier to read/code for instance as parameters for functions or things like that. Also to avoid the new line I like to keep with all my if/else.

Nesting it would be a big no-no in my book.

So, resuming, for a single if/else I'll use the ternary operator. For other cases, a regular if/else if/else (or switch).

2

For simple tasks, like assigning a different value depending on a condition, they're great. I wouldn't use them when there are longer expressions depending on the condition though.

2

If you and your workmates understand what they do and they aren't created in massive groups I think they make the code less complex and easier to read because there is simply less code.

The only time I think ternary operators make code harder to understand is when you have more than three or foyr in one line. Most people don't remember that they are right based precedence and when you have a stack of them it makes reading the code a nightmare.

2

As so many answers have said, it depends. I find that if the ternary comparison is not visible in a quick scan down the code, then it should not be used.

As a side issue, I might also note that its very existence is actually a bit of an anomaly due to the fact that in C, comparison testing is a statement. In Icon, the if construct (like most of Icon) is actually an expression. So you can do things like:

x[if y > 5 then 5 else y] := "Y"

... which I find much more readable than a ternary comparison operator. :-)

There was a discussion recently about the possibility of adding the ?: operator to Icon, but several people correctly pointed out that there was absolutely no need because of the way if works.

Which means that if you could do that in C (or any of the other languages that have the ternary operator), then you wouldn't, in fact, need the ternary operator at all.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.