What is the most accepted way to convert a boolean
to an int
in Java?
12 Answers
int myInt = myBoolean ? 1 : 0;
^^
PS : true = 1 and false = 0
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63In the case where myBoolean stands for a boolean expression, using parenthesis is more readable.– rspSep 25, 2010 at 12:33
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45Yes, as in
(foo && (!bar || baz)) ? 1 : 0
. Obviously, if it's just an identifier, the parens aren't necessary or desirable.– BlrflSep 25, 2010 at 12:58 -
1for beginners like me,
(boolean expression) ? 1 : 0;
would be more understandable. I thinkmy
prefix made it look like a variable.– dixhomMar 1, 2016 at 23:50 -
12@Blrfl in your example parentheses are a must, not a matter of readability.
foo && (!bar || baz) ? 1 : 0
would be a syntax error. (I know it's been 6 years) Apr 26, 2016 at 11:23 -
1@KonradMorawski in what way does
foo && (!bar || baz) ? 1 : 0
cause a syntax error??:
has lower precedence than both&&
and||
.– royhowieOct 14, 2019 at 3:56
Using the ternary operator is the most simple, most efficient, and most readable way to do what you want. I encourage you to use this solution.
However, I can't resist to propose an alternative, contrived, inefficient, unreadable solution.
int boolToInt(Boolean b) {
return b.compareTo(false);
}
Hey, people like to vote for such cool answers !
Edit
By the way, I often saw conversions from a boolean to an int for the sole purpose of doing a comparison of the two values (generally, in implementations of compareTo
method). Boolean#compareTo
is the way to go in those specific cases.
Edit 2
Java 7 introduced a new utility function that works with primitive types directly, Boolean#compare
(Thanks shmosel)
int boolToInt(boolean b) {
return Boolean.compare(b, false);
}
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2Will be inlined by modern JIT's, so not necessarily inefficient. Also it documents why the b.compareTo is being used so it is readable. Jul 3, 2011 at 13:02
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3It can be slow because we need to box the primitive value in an object. The ternary operator method works directly with primitive values without conversion, so I think it's more efficient.– barjakJul 3, 2011 at 18:38
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81. You can use
Boolean.compare()
and avoid the autoboxing. 2. The documentation forBoolean.compareTo()
does not say it will return 1, only "a positive value if this object represents true and the argument represents false".– shmoselOct 14, 2014 at 22:14 -
3I just did a test converting 1,000,000 random Boolean values and this method was consistently faster than that based on the ternary operator. It shaved off about 10ms.– MapsyOct 24, 2014 at 13:14
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5@AlexT. if you do microbenchmarks you should use a framework to ensure that you measure correctly. See openjdk.java.net/projects/code-tools/jmh. Nov 21, 2014 at 8:31
boolean b = ....;
int i = -("false".indexOf("" + b));
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7@ThorbjørnRavnAndersen Yeah. Using one of the other, more efficient, methods posted that doesn't require that overhead. Unless you can explain how creating string objects to simply check the value of a boolean is in any way efficient.– arkonJun 5, 2013 at 16:17
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9
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5@ThorbjørnRavnAndersen Micro-optimization has nothing to do with it, since it's all a matter of context. If I'm calling a method 1000000+ times which uses this block, then I'm potentially creating 1000000+ extra objects that need to be GC'd. I'm not sure how demanding things are at your job, but my boss would pull me aside and give me a wtf lecture if I tried using something like this.– arkonJun 5, 2013 at 16:40
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13@ThorbjørnRavnAndersen I have no control over how my methods are used or how often they are called, which is entirely the point. You're sacrificing both performance and readability for absolutely no tangible benefit.– arkonJun 5, 2013 at 17:06
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9Its definitely creative but I cannot think of a single advantage to using this method. It's more verbose, and (I'm guessing) less efficient, but it sure is an interesting method. Jul 26, 2013 at 13:18
import org.apache.commons.lang3.BooleanUtils;
boolean x = true;
int y= BooleanUtils.toInteger(x);
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8FWIW,
BooleanUtils.toInteger
is implemented as justreturn bool ? 1 : 0;
. Feb 27, 2020 at 3:18 -
8
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@EricDuminil This can slightly increase readability in case of nested ( ? : ) or long one-liners.– Pat LeeApr 28, 2021 at 10:59
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@EricDuminil IMO
xyz.stream().map(BooleanUtils::toInteger)
is much more readable thanxyz.stream().map(x -> x ? 1 : 0)
Oct 13, 2021 at 14:13 -
@bb1950328: Yes, it's more readable, but it doesn't have anything to do with Apache Commons, though. You could simply use the method defined in stackoverflow.com/a/3794521/6419007 instead. Oct 13, 2021 at 15:09
If you use Apache Commons Lang (which I think a lot of projects use it), you can just use it like this:
int myInt = BooleanUtils.toInteger(boolean_expression);
toInteger
method returns 1 if boolean_expression
is true, 0 otherwise
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4FWIW,
BooleanUtils.toInteger
is implemented as justreturn bool ? 1 : 0;
. Feb 27, 2020 at 3:19
That depends on the situation. Often the most simple approach is the best because it is easy to understand:
if (something) {
otherThing = 1;
} else {
otherThing = 0;
}
or
int otherThing = something ? 1 : 0;
But sometimes it useful to use an Enum instead of a boolean flag. Let imagine there are synchronous and asynchronous processes:
Process process = Process.SYNCHRONOUS;
System.out.println(process.getCode());
In Java, enum can have additional attributes and methods:
public enum Process {
SYNCHRONOUS (0),
ASYNCHRONOUS (1);
private int code;
private Process (int code) {
this.code = code;
}
public int getCode() {
return code;
}
}
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6An additional reason for using an if instead of
?:
is that you can put breakpoints inside the if blocks. Jul 3, 2011 at 13:03 -
If true -> 1
and false -> 0
mapping is what you want, you can do:
boolean b = true;
int i = b ? 1 : 0; // assigns 1 to i.
If you want to obfuscate, use this:
System.out.println( 1 & Boolean.hashCode( true ) >> 1 ); // 1
System.out.println( 1 & Boolean.hashCode( false ) >> 1 ); // 0
Lets play trick with Boolean.compare(boolean, boolean)
. Default behavior of function: if both values are equal than it returns 0
otherwise -1
.
public int valueOf(Boolean flag) {
return Boolean.compare(flag, Boolean.TRUE) + 1;
}
Explanation: As we know default return of Boolean.compare is -1 in case of mis-match so +1 make return value to 0 for False
and 1 for True
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6
Boolean.compare(myBoolean, false)
would fit better accorning to the quoted description– VadzimSep 5, 2016 at 20:03 -
@Vadzim Yes indeed will generate 1 and 0 by comparing with false and in current scenario it will generate 0 and -1. Both solutions are fine and +1 for your comment :-)– mumairSep 6, 2016 at 8:34
public static int convBool(boolean b)
{
int convBool = 0;
if(b) convBool = 1;
return convBool;
}
Then use :
convBool(aBool);
true
andfalse
respectively?