-2

I need a simple function to return "true" or "false" the argument passed to it is:

1 or 0, or true or false

I currently had something like this, so the answer, if possible, should be concise as per below:

def boolean(value); return value ? ( value == 1 ? "true" : "false) : nil; end

Thanks.

1
  • Something to consider: Putting a method all on one line results in confusing code. If you have any logic at all, break it onto multiple lines. It'll read better, which will help when you're looking at the code at 4:00AM and you're slightly hung-over. Dec 15, 2014 at 23:41

3 Answers 3

5

Some ideas:

def boolean(x)
   %w{1 true}.include?(x).to_s
end

def boolean(x)
  (x == '1' || x == 'true').to_s
end

There's also the wannabe bool gem:

require 'wannabe_bool'

'1'.to_b # => true
'0'.to_b # => false

'true'.to_b  # => true
'false'.to_b # => false
1

You might want to have a look how Rails does this typecasting in its database connection adapter:

TRUE_VALUES = [true, 1, '1', 't', 'T', 'true', 'TRUE', 'on', 'ON'].to_set

# convert something to a boolean
def value_to_boolean(value)
  if value.is_a?(String) && value.empty?
    nil
  else
    TRUE_VALUES.include?(value)
  end
end

See: docs for ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Column

0

I think this'll work, comments are welcome though:

def b(k); return k ? ( (k == "1" || k == "true") ? "true" : "false" ) : nil; end

puts b("1")
puts b("0")

puts b("true")
puts b("false")

Result:

true
false
true
false
5
  • 2
    Why do you try to write it all in one line? Ternary operator is really cool, but not nested.
    – nathanvda
    Dec 15, 2014 at 22:45
  • @nathanvda it is too nested. As you can clearly see in his example.
    – vgoff
    Dec 15, 2014 at 23:05
  • 1
    No, don't do that. There's no speed advantage to writing it on one line, and it's certainly not macho to write code that makes it harder for others to read. Think "kinder and gentler". Dec 15, 2014 at 23:48
  • Exactly, vgoff, that was my point. But maybe the OP had a special reason to write it like that. Like the Tin Man says: I prefer readability over coolness :) If the checking for nil was really important, it would go for a quick exit if the given value was nil.
    – nathanvda
    Dec 16, 2014 at 0:30
  • My specific use case was to keep the function as close to a one liner as possible. This was to make the code change inline with what was already preset. I didn't want to refactor a whole bunch of other code to submit a simple patch.
    – farhany
    Dec 16, 2014 at 21:59

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