18

I always assumed that booleans were more efficient than ints at storing an on/off value - considering that's their reason for existence. I recently decided to check if this is true with the help of jsperf, and it came up with some contrary results!

http://jsperf.com/bool-vs-int

Here is the first test I tried. Toggling the value of the on/off switch. On Chrome it's significantly faster to do this using 1/0, but on firefox it's slightly faster to do this using bool. Interesting.

http://jsperf.com/bool-vs-int-2

And here's the second test I tried. Using them in a conditional. This appears to have significant advantage for ints as opposed to bools, up to 70% faster to use 1/0 instead of booleans - on both firefox and chrome. Wtf?

I guess my question is, am I doing something wrong? Why are ints so much better at boolean's job? Is the only value of using bools clarity, or am I missing something important?

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    You say "only value" as if clarity weren't of premium importance! Aug 28, 2011 at 15:52
  • Oh, and with IE8 there's no significant difference. @Malvolio: 1/0 toggles are pretty clear too! The only theoretically confusing part is the x=1-x toggle, and the performance boosts seem worth the explanatory comment.
    – Thristhart
    Aug 28, 2011 at 15:55
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    At over one hundred million operations per second, I don't believe that you will ever see this as a performance bottleneck in real world code.
    – Douglas
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:05
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    OP, tell me you're kidding. You are not seriously planning to make your code less clear in the hopes of saving tens of nanoseconds by exploiting temporary idiosyncrasies in the current implementations of some browsers for a program where performance isn't even important? If you were writing graphics-card software or weather simulation, maybe. Otherwise, tell your language what you want it to do and trust the language implementers to optimize the results. Aug 28, 2011 at 16:18
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    Dude, this oddity blows my mind. +1 for even thinking about it.
    – Edwin
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:19

5 Answers 5

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Disclaimer, I can only speak for Firefox, but I guess Chrome is similar.

First example (http://jsperf.com/bool-vs-int):

  1. The Not operation JägerMonkey (Spidmonkey's JavaScript methodjit) inlines the check for boolean first and then just xors, which is really fast (We don't know the type of a/b, so we need to check the type). The second check is for int, so if a/b would be a int this would be a little bit slower. Code

  2. The Subtract operation. We again don't know the type of c/d. And again you are lucky we are going to assume ints and inline that first. But because in JavaScript number operations are specified to be IEEE 754 doubles, we need to check for overflow. So the only difference is "sub" and a "conditional jump" on overflow vs. plain xor in case 1. Code

Second example: (I am not 100% sure about these, because I never really looked at this code before)

  1. and 3. The If. We inline a check for boolean, all other cases end up calling a function converting the value to a boolean. Code

  2. The Compare and If. This one is a really complex case from the implementation point of view, because it was really important to optimize equality operations. So I think I found the right code, that seems to suggest we first check for double and then for integers. And because we know that the result of a compare is always a boolean, we can optimize the if statement. Code

Followup I dumped the generated machine code, so if you are still interested, here you go.

Overall this is just a piece in a bigger picture. If we knew what kind of type the variables had and knew that the subtraction won't overflow then we could make all these cases about equally fast. These efforts are being made with IonMonkey or v8's Crankshaft. This means you should avoid optimizing based of this information, because:

  1. it's already pretty fast
  2. the engine developers take care of optimizing it for you
  3. it will be even faster in the future.
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    One of the best answers to anything on stack overflow... How does this not have more upvotes?
    – mmm
    Nov 1, 2014 at 23:15
0

your test was a bit off due to the definition of "function" and "var" and the call for the function. The cost to define function and variables and calling them will differ from engine to engine. I modified your tests, try to re-run with your browsers (note that IE was off because the first run was weird but consecutive runs were as expected where bool is fastest): http://jsperf.com/bool-vs-int-2/4

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    Guys, if it ain't an answer, don't post it as an answer.
    – Edwin
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:18
  • defining the function and var are done outside the tests, and calling the function is done an equal number of times per test. Variations between JS implementations doesn't seem relevant since this is meant to be a comparison between the different tests, not the different browsers.
    – user113716
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:22
  • Gah, a boolean compare seems to take 1.2 ns. So if we got a 10% improvement, 8 billion repetitions would save one second. Aug 28, 2011 at 16:23
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    @Edwin, this was an answer. The question was "Am I doing something wrong?" (really, check the post) and the answer, apparently, is "Yes". Aug 28, 2011 at 16:24
  • @Malvolio Whoops; I was focusing on the last two questions.
    – Edwin
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:25
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I don't know but in the second test it does
if(a) bluh();
vs
if(c == 1) bluh();

maybe c==1 is faster because you're comparing a value with one with the same type
but if you do if(a) then js need to check if the value evaluates to true, not just if it is true...

That could be the reason...

Maybe we need to test
if(c==1)
vs
if(a===true) with three =

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    Guys, if it ain't an answer, don't post it as an answer.
    – Edwin
    Aug 28, 2011 at 16:18
0

For me the choice would be based on API usage. Always return that which is most useful. If I use secondary code, I'd favor methods that return booleans. This probably makes the code ready to be chained. The alternative is to provide overloaded methods.

0

Diggin' deep here. Regarding performance, I'm still unsure (this is why I found this thread) if booleans vs 0/1 is faster when computing and it still seems heavily browser-dependent. But take into account, that in extremely huge datasets the data has to be downloaded by the user first anyway: "true" and "false" obv take up 4 or 5 characters respectively, whereas 0 and 1 are only 1 character. So it might save you a little bit of bandwidth at least, so less time to load and only after that is it up to the client's browser and hardware how to deal with those types, which seems pretty much negligible.

As a little bonus and to actually contribute something, since (I think?) no one mentioned it here, if you are going with the 0 and 1 approach, instead of using if-statements you can use bitwise operations to toggle between them, which should be pretty fast:

x=0;
x^=1; // 1
x^=1; // 0

This is the equivalence to using this toggle for booleans:

x=false;
x=!x; // true
x=!x; // false

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