Possible Duplicate:
Is it bad to explicitly compare against boolean constants e.g. if (b == false) in Java?
In this NotePadProvider sample code, I noticed that the author chose the form:
if (values.containsKey(NoteColumns.CREATED_DATE) == false) {
values.put(NoteColumns.CREATED_DATE, now);
}
Over:
if (!values.containsKey(NoteColumns.CREATED_DATE)) {
values.put(NoteColumns.CREATED_DATE, now);
}
Is there any advantage in the first form over the more logical one?
if (b==false)
is more verbose and harder to read. If you want to make it even more verbose, you could useif (b == false == true == true)
(borrowed from stackoverflow.com/questions/2661110)if(b != true)
to complete things. Coming from a C-Background I prefer the verbose version for clarity, however (assuming the compiler doesn't optimize that away) the verbose appoach creates more processing:Read valaue one
read value two
compare
proceed according to output
as opposed toread value
proceed according to value