3

I want to create my Boolean-like object. But I don't want to pollute Boolean.prototype. So I created MyBool like

MyBool = function (x) {
  this.value = x;
  this.valueOf = function () { return x; };
  this.toString = function () { return x; };
}
MyBool.prototype.and = function (y) {
  if (y.constructor !== MyBool) throw 'You cannot do that!';
  return this.value && y.value;
}

and its instances

mytrue = new MyBool(true);
myfalse = new MyBool(false);

But now, I noticed that

if (myfalse) {
  console.log ("myfalse is true!!!")
}

prints that myfalse is true!!!

(Yet +myfalse (that is [[ToNumber]] conversion) comes to falsy, thanks to valueOf)

It's obvious because only following values are falsy in ECMAScript.

undefined, null, false, +0, -0, NaN, ''

If Argument Type is Object, [[ToBoolean]] brings us true, in any case. (see ECMA Type Conversion and Testing)

Is there any crafty way to create a falsy object? It's ok if

myfalse.constructor is MyBool
(!! myfalse) is false

Any cheat is welcome, including ECMA5's set/get/defineProperty or anything else.

Thanks in advance.

2
  • 1
    What's the reason you're doing this? What's wrong with Boolean?
    – Kevin
    May 17, 2011 at 6:57
  • When I want to deal with other language (A, for explanation) in JavaScript, A's false and JavaScript's false should be distinguished. And also, constructor's check leads my code to strict one.
    – itchyny
    May 17, 2011 at 8:01

3 Answers 3

1

I don't think this is currently possible, if you consider:

var myBool = new Boolean(false);
if (myBool) {
    alert('Not false');
}
3
  • Oh, that has no difference to false... Thanks anyway.
    – itchyny
    May 17, 2011 at 7:54
  • interesting though - if you remove the new keyword from the above example, myBool evaluates to false.
    – Matty F
    May 17, 2011 at 23:17
  • oppps... I overlooked that. Yes, that's surely interesting. Thank you for reminding me.
    – itchyny
    May 18, 2011 at 15:05
0

In response to your comment, indicating you want a strict boolean. Why not use the equality operator?

var someBoolean = false,
    someObj = { };

if (someBoolean === false)
{
    // tada, someBoolean is a boolean AND false
}

// Returns false because someObj is NOT a boolean
if (someObj === true)
{
   ..
}
-1

Understand what if(myfalse){} is doing. It is checking for the existence of myfalse, not whether its true or false. In this case, myfalse is an object and thus exists, and thus is true.

1
  • If myfalse does not really exist, ReferenceError should be thrown. But yeah, maybe my words was too little. Thanks.
    – itchyny
    May 17, 2011 at 7:53

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