I understand what the double not operator does in javascript. I'm curious about it's use though and whether or not a recent assertion that I made is correct.

I said that if (!!someVar) is never meaningful nor is (!!someVar && ... because both the if and the && will cause someVar to be evaluated as a boolean so the !! is superfluous.

In fact, the only time that I could think of that it would be legitimate to use the double not operator is if you wanted to do a strict comparison to another boolean value (so maybe in return value that expects true or false explicitly).

Is this correct? I started to doubt myself when I noticed jQuery 1.3.2 used both if (!!someVar) and return !!someVar && ...

Does the double not have any actual effect in these situations?

My personal opinion is that it just leads to confusion. If I see an if statement, I know it's evaluating it as a boolean.

link|improve this question

80% accept rate
2  
Note that (as Justin points out in his answer to the question you reference stackoverflow.com/questions/1406604/…), there is no double-not operator. !! merely applies the not operator twice. – outis Feb 1 '10 at 4:31
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

In the context of if statements I'm with you, it is completely safe because internally, the ToBoolean operation will be executed on the condition expression (see Step 3 on the spec).

But if you want to, lets say, return a boolean value from a function, you should ensure that the result will be actually boolean, for example:

function isFoo () {
  return 0 && true;
}

console.log(isFoo()); // will show zero
typeof isFoo() == "number";

In conclusion, the Boolean Logical Operators can return an operand, and not a Boolean result necessarily:

The Logical AND operator (&&), will return the value of the second operand if the first is truly:

true && "foo"; // "foo"

And it will return the value of the first operand if it is by itself falsy:

NaN && "anything"; // NaN
0 && "anything"; // 0

On the other hand, the Logical OR operator (||) will return the value of the second operand, if the first one is falsy:

false || "bar"; // "bar"

And it will return the value of the first operand if it is by itself non-falsy:

"foo" || "anything"; // "foo"

Maybe it's worth mentioning that the falsy values are: null, undefined, NaN, 0, zero-length string, and of course false.

Anything else (that is not falsy, a Boolean object or a Boolean value), evaluated in boolean context, will return true.

link|improve this answer
Good answer. Thanks for the references! – Keith Bentrup Feb 1 '10 at 2:32
feedback

Yes, !!var is used when you want 0||1 return value.

One is simple comparison of bool values, when you want "a == b" be equivalent of "a xor not b" except a=5 and b=7 would both be true but not be equal.

Another is when you want to coerce a set of conditions into bits of a variable:

 var BIT_NONEMPTY=1;
 var BIT_HASERRORS=2;
 var BIT_HASCHILDREN=4;
 var BIT_HASCONTENT=8;

 result_bitfields = 
    (!!countLines())*BIT_NOTEMPTY +
    (!!errorCode())*BIT_HASERRORS +
    (!!firstChild())*BIT_HASCHILDREN +
    (!!getContent())*BIT_HASCONTENT;

Not very useful in Javascript which lives pretty far from bit values, but may be useful at times.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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