I would prefer shorter variant. But sometimes == false helps to make your code even shorter:
For real-life scenario in projects using C# 2.0 I see only one good reason to do this: bool? type. Three-state bool? is useful and it is easy to check one of its possible values this way.
Actually you can't use (!IsGood) if IsGood is bool?. But writing (IsGood.HasValue && IsGood.Value) is worse than (IsGood == true).
Play with this sample to get idea:
bool? value = true; // try false and null too
if (value == true)
{
Console.WriteLine("value is true");
}
else if (value == false)
{
Console.WriteLine("value is false");
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("value is null");
}
There is one more case I've just discovered where if (!IsGood) { ... } is not the same as if (IsGood == false) { ... }. But this one is not realistic ;) Operator overloading may kind of help here :) (and operator true/false that AFAIK is discouraged in C# 2.0 because it is intended purpose is to provide bool?-like behavior for user-defined type and now you can get it with standard type!)
using System;
namespace BoolHack
{
class Program
{
public struct CrazyBool
{
private readonly bool value;
public CrazyBool(bool value)
{
this.value = value;
}
// Just to make nice init possible ;)
public static implicit operator CrazyBool(bool value)
{
return new CrazyBool(value);
}
public static bool operator==(CrazyBool crazyBool, bool value)
{
return crazyBool.value == value;
}
public static bool operator!=(CrazyBool crazyBool, bool value)
{
return crazyBool.value != value;
}
#region Twisted logic!
public static bool operator true(CrazyBool crazyBool)
{
return !crazyBool.value;
}
public static bool operator false(CrazyBool crazyBool)
{
return crazyBool.value;
}
#endregion Twisted logic!
}
static void Main()
{
CrazyBool IsGood = false;
if (IsGood)
{
if (IsGood == false)
{
Console.WriteLine("Now you should understand why those type is called CrazyBool!");
}
}
}
}
}
So... please, use operator overloading with caution :(