3519

Can I convert a string representing a boolean value (e.g., 'true', 'false') into an intrinsic type in JavaScript?

I have a hidden form in HTML that is updated based on a user's selection within a list. This form contains some fields which represent boolean values and are dynamically populated with an intrinsic boolean value. However, once this value is placed into the hidden input field it becomes a string.

The only way I could find to determine the field's boolean value, once it was converted into a string, was to depend upon the literal value of its string representation.

var myValue = document.myForm.IS_TRUE.value;
var isTrueSet = myValue == 'true';

Is there a better way to accomplish this?

18
  • 107
    "Is there a better way to accomplish this?" - there is certainly a worse way :D string=(string==String(string?true:false))?(string?true:false):(!string?true:fa‌​lse); Apr 16, 2015 at 10:25
  • 14
    Easily handle strings and bools: function parseBool(val) { return val === true || val === "true" } Sep 10, 2015 at 14:24
  • 3
    @Mark function checkBool(x) { if(x) {return true;} else {return false;} }
    – Sebi
    Nov 29, 2016 at 15:10
  • 4
    @Sebi: You forgot to document it: if (checkBool(x) != false) { ... } else { ... } Nov 29, 2016 at 18:21
  • 9
    !!(parseInt(value) || value === "true") Feb 22, 2017 at 3:58

106 Answers 106

4969

Do:

var isTrueSet = (myValue === 'true');

using the identity operator (===), which doesn't make any implicit type conversions when the compared variables have different types.

This will set isTrueSet to a boolean true if the string is "true" and boolean false if it is string "false" or not set at all.

For making it case-insensitive, try:

var isTrueSet = /^true$/i.test(myValue);
// or
var isTrueSet = (myValue?.toLowerCase?.() === 'true');
// or
var isTrueSet = (String(myValue).toLowerCase() === 'true');

Don't:

You should probably be cautious about using these two methods for your specific needs:

var myBool = Boolean("false");  // == true

var myBool = !!"false";  // == true

Any string which isn't the empty string will evaluate to true by using them. Although they're the cleanest methods I can think of concerning to boolean conversion, I think they're not what you're looking for.

9
  • 249
    myValue === 'true'; is precisely equivalent to myValue == 'true';. There is no benefit in using === over == here.
    – Tim Down
    Aug 26, 2010 at 11:01
  • 749
    I follow Crockford's advice and use === and !== whenever it makes sense, which is almost always.
    – guinaps
    Feb 10, 2011 at 15:37
  • @guinaps most of the javascript strict conventions to blanket apply to all javascript usage just cause convoluted code and a lack of understanding of the principles, theory, or usage of javascript.
    – June
    Dec 7, 2021 at 18:35
  • 5
    === should be used because it's also checking for the right type. Also, it has better comparison performances than ==.
    – NoxFly
    Dec 18, 2021 at 11:20
  • 2
    Thanks. Comes in handy when the value comes from an environment variable, which are strings JavaScript, and need to translate those into booleans. Apr 12, 2022 at 3:29
861

Warning

This highly upvoted legacy answer is technically correct but only covers a very specific scenario, when your string value is EXACTLY "true" or "false".

An invalid json string passed into these functions below WILL throw an exception.


Original answer:

How about?

JSON.parse("True".toLowerCase());

or with jQuery

$.parseJSON("TRUE".toLowerCase());
6
  • 81
    The problem with this is that many potential value generate a parse error which stops JS execution. So running JSON.parse("FALSE") bombs Javascript. The point of the question, I think, is not to simply solve these exact cases, but also be resilient to other cases.
    – BishopZ
    Jan 26, 2013 at 22:52
  • 55
    It's pretty simple to just say JSON.parse("TRUE".toLowerCase()) so that it can parse correctly.
    – Yuck
    Aug 8, 2013 at 15:00
  • 4
    @BishopZ : Stopping JS execution is probably a desirable feature following best-pattern coding styles: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fail-fast
    – earizon
    Oct 13, 2021 at 10:04
  • If we go by question title alone it goes out of discussion all that JSON thing. The question was about a string not about what can result from its transformation. Of course looking at an object "stored" in a string using the JSON format one can ask what happens in such a scenario. Or we could go as well another way towards strings converted in numbers (not into objects) for example let x = 0 + "-0" // "0-0" versus let x = 0 - "-0" // 0 but, again, we move out of main topic :)
    – Eve
    Apr 30, 2022 at 13:03
  • 1
    @RaviMCA Couldn't you have come up with something a little more fact-based than that link? You may be right (though just yesterday I was reading about the difference between eval and JSON.parse, and how you use the latter to avoid the injection problems of the former) but that page is nothing more than poorly described hearsay.
    – Auspex
    Oct 28, 2022 at 15:21
298
const stringToBoolean = (stringValue) => {
    switch(stringValue?.toLowerCase()?.trim()){
        case "true": 
        case "yes": 
        case "1": 
          return true;

        case "false": 
        case "no": 
        case "0": 
        case null: 
        case undefined:
          return false;

        default: 
          return JSON.parse(stringValue);
    }
}
4
  • 56
    Actually it can be simplified. 1) There is no need to test for "true", "yes" and "1". 2) toLowerCase does not return null. 3) Boolean(string) is the same as string!=="" here. => switch(string.toLowerCase()) {case "false": case "no": case "0": case "": return false; default: return true;}
    – Robert
    Jun 25, 2013 at 5:27
  • 7
    Note, this will default to true - for example: stringToBoolean('banana') // true
    – dav_i
    Jul 7, 2021 at 13:25
  • The result of JSON.parse(stringValue) will be of return type "number" instead of a "boolean" if you input a number. Otherwise fine. Your function's name is stringToBoolean, not stringToNumberOrBooleanOrError. Also, if you pass undefined, you get a JSON.parse error, which is (might be) fine, but lets the programmer at a loss as to where the error is (if there's no stacktrace...). Sep 15, 2022 at 9:48
  • I think the question is asking about only converting the string 'true' -> true (native type) and 'false' -> false (native type). But, if you want to do a truthy/falsey conversion are you are here, you could just add !! to the front: const convertedVar = !!'myString' // is true
    – Andrew
    Oct 27, 2022 at 19:28
270

I think this is much more universal:

if (String(a).toLowerCase() == "true") ...

It goes:

String(true) == "true"     //returns true
String(false) == "true"    //returns false
String("true") == "true"   //returns true
String("false") == "true"  //returns false
1
  • 26
    When you can receive a string in uppercase or a boolean, then String(a).toLowerCase() === 'true'
    – pauloya
    Feb 29, 2012 at 12:49
171

Remember to match case:

var isTrueSet = (myValue.toLowerCase() === 'true');

Also, if it's a form element checkbox, you can also detect if the checkbox is checked:

var isTrueSet = document.myForm.IS_TRUE.checked;

Assuming that if it is checked, it is "set" equal to true. This evaluates as true/false.

1
  • This will fail if myValue is null or undefined or any type other than a string.
    – Woozar
    Nov 8, 2021 at 8:55
160

This is the easiest way to do boolean conversion I came across recently. Thought of adding it.

JSON.parse('true');

let trueResponse = JSON.parse('true');

let falseResponse = JSON.parse('false');

console.log(trueResponse);
console.log(falseResponse);

6
  • 19
    This works, but you have to be careful not to pass it empty strings or it'll pop.
    – Asinus Rex
    Aug 17, 2021 at 9:39
  • 13
    the sexy solution, I liked it! Nov 2, 2021 at 17:49
  • 7
    take all my money! 💵 Mar 9, 2022 at 17:55
  • 2
    This is a quick and dirty solution for storing true/false inside .env
    – marko-36
    Apr 20, 2022 at 15:41
  • 6
    should wrap in try/catch in many cases
    – Ivan Yulin
    Apr 25, 2022 at 12:58
138

You can use regular expressions:

/*
 * Converts a string to a bool.
 *
 * This conversion will:
 *
 *  - match 'true', 'on', or '1' as true.
 *  - ignore all white-space padding
 *  - ignore capitalization (case).
 *
 * '  tRue  ','ON', and '1   ' will all evaluate as true.
 *
 */
function strToBool(s)
{
    // will match one and only one of the string 'true','1', or 'on' regardless
    // of capitalization and regardless of surrounding white-space.
    //
    regex=/^\s*(true|1|on)\s*$/i

    return regex.test(s);
}

If you like extending the String class you can do:

String.prototype.bool = function() {
    return strToBool(this);
};

alert("true".bool());

For those (see the comments) that would like to extend the String object to get this but are worried about enumerability and are worried about clashing with other code that extends the String object:

Object.defineProperty(String.prototype, "com_example_bool", {
    get : function() {
        return (/^(true|1)$/i).test(this);
    }
});
alert("true".com_example_bool);

(Won't work in older browsers of course and Firefox shows false while Opera, Chrome, Safari and IE show true. Bug 720760)

4
  • 10
    You can always prefix the function if you're afraid that it'll interfere with some other code. If some code still breaks, that code is just too brittle and should be fixed. If your added function makes the object too heavy where it cause a performance issue for other code, then, obviously you don't want to do that. But, I don't think it's generally a bad idea to extend built-in objects. They also wouldn't be publicly extendable if that was the case.
    – Shadow2531
    Jul 16, 2011 at 19:06
  • 42
    @DTrejo @Szymon I disagree. This is exactly the kind of thing overloading the prototype is for. If you're afraid of it breaking (poor) code that relies on for..in, there are ways to hide properties from enumeration. See Object.defineProperty.
    – devios1
    Sep 12, 2011 at 14:29
  • 1
    I love the simplicity of the regex approach to check for values that are typically "true". A suggestion for modification: the logic of false is 0 and true is non-zero. Therefore I think it's better to check for the opposite of false, i.e. return !(/^(false|0|off|no)$/i).test(this); -- also notice that I included "no".
    – hargobind
    Feb 21, 2022 at 0:03
  • Most of this answer is actually not very performant. If you can make any assumptions about your input, such as the input never being "on" or "tRUe", then it would pay to not overengineer your implementation. Extending String.prototype is never okay.
    – wybe
    Jul 5, 2022 at 8:27
84

Wood-eye be careful. After seeing the consequences after applying the top answer with 500+ upvotes, I feel obligated to post something that is actually useful:

Let's start with the shortest, but very strict way:

var str = "true";
var mybool = JSON.parse(str);

And end with a proper, more tolerant way:

var parseBool = function(str, strict) 
{
    // console.log(typeof str);
    // strict: JSON.parse(str)
    
    if (str == null)
    {
        if (strict)
            throw new Error("Parameter 'str' is null or undefined.");

        return false;
    }
    
    if (typeof str === 'boolean')
    {
        return (str === true);
    } 
    
    if(typeof str === 'string')
    {
        if(str == "")
            return false;
            
        str = str.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, '');
        if(str.toLowerCase() == 'true' || str.toLowerCase() == 'yes')
            return true;
        
        str = str.replace(/,/g, '.');
        str = str.replace(/^\s*\-\s*/g, '-');
    }
    
    // var isNum = string.match(/^[0-9]+$/) != null;
    // var isNum = /^\d+$/.test(str);
    if(!isNaN(str))
        return (parseFloat(str) != 0);
        
    return false;
}

Testing:

var array_1 = new Array(true, 1, "1",-1, "-1", " - 1", "true", "TrUe", "  true  ", "  TrUe", 1/0, "1.5", "1,5", 1.5, 5, -3, -0.1, 0.1, " - 0.1", Infinity, "Infinity", -Infinity, "-Infinity"," - Infinity", " yEs");

var array_2 = new Array(null, "", false, "false", "   false   ", " f alse", "FaLsE", 0, "00", "1/0", 0.0, "0.0", "0,0", "100a", "1 00", " 0 ", 0.0, "0.0", -0.0, "-0.0", " -1a ", "abc");


for(var i =0; i < array_1.length;++i){ console.log("array_1["+i+"] ("+array_1[i]+"): " + parseBool(array_1[i]));}

for(var i =0; i < array_2.length;++i){ console.log("array_2["+i+"] ("+array_2[i]+"): " + parseBool(array_2[i]));}

for(var i =0; i < array_1.length;++i){ console.log(parseBool(array_1[i]));}
for(var i =0; i < array_2.length;++i){ console.log(parseBool(array_2[i]));}
3
  • 1
    if(str == null) return false; will return random errors each time an input is wrongly initialized to null. Being tolerant is not a desirable feature most of the times:
    – earizon
    Oct 13, 2021 at 10:15
  • @earizon: No, it will not "return random errors" - it will return false - BUT that behaviour may then cause random errors in your application. Feel free to instead throw an error if the value is null/undefined. Btw, now solved by overload strict = true. Pass strict = true, and you will now get an error on parse. Sep 15, 2022 at 9:32
  • it depends on whether the invoked function is considered the "source of true" and invoking functions must adapt to its implementation, or whether the invoked function is an utility/service that must comply with what invoking functions are expecting according to "some contract". In general, coding conditional logic based on nulls force knowledge by calling functions of internal implementation of called one. Throwing is safer and (much) simpler. google.com/search?channel=fs&q=billion+dollar+mistake (100% agree about using strict mode)
    – earizon
    Sep 16, 2022 at 11:27
56

I thought that @Steven 's answer was the best one, and took care of a lot more cases than if the incoming value was just a string. I wanted to extend it a bit and offer the following:

function isTrue(value){
    if (typeof(value) === 'string'){
        value = value.trim().toLowerCase();
    }
    switch(value){
        case true:
        case "true":
        case 1:
        case "1":
        case "on":
        case "yes":
            return true;
        default: 
            return false;
    }
}

It's not necessary to cover all the false cases if you already know all of the true cases you'd have to account for. You can pass anything into this method that could pass for a true value (or add others, it's pretty straightforward), and everything else would be considered false

0
47

Universal solution with JSON parse:

function getBool(val) {
    return !!JSON.parse(String(val).toLowerCase());
}

getBool("1"); //true
getBool("0"); //false
getBool("true"); //true
getBool("false"); //false
getBool("TRUE"); //true
getBool("FALSE"); //false

UPDATE (without JSON):

function getBool(val){ 
    var num = +val;
    return !isNaN(num) ? !!num : !!String(val).toLowerCase().replace(!!0,'');
}

I also created fiddle to test it http://jsfiddle.net/remunda/2GRhG/

2
  • 1
    The 'without JSON' version has some flaw: val="0" ; console.log(!!(+val||String(val).toLowerCase().replace(!!0,'')) ); produces true
    – Etienne
    Jul 22, 2014 at 7:42
  • 4
    getBool(undefined) will crash When using the original JSON version and will return true for the 2nd version. Here is a 3rd version which returns false: function getBool(val) { var num; return val != null && (!isNaN(num = +val) ? !!num : !!String(val).toLowerCase().replace(!!0,'')); } Aug 21, 2014 at 13:25
36

Your solution is fine.

Using === would just be silly in this case, as the field's value will always be a String.

4
  • 21
    Why you think it would be silly to use ===? In terms of performance it would be exactly the same if both types are Strings. Anyway, I rather use === since I always avoid the use of == and !=. Justifications: stackoverflow.com/questions/359494/… Aug 17, 2010 at 19:01
  • 4
    Since value will always be a string neither == nor === are silly. Both are the right tool for this job. They only differ when the types are not equal. In that case === simply returns false while == executes an intricate type coercion algorithm before comparison.
    – Robert
    Jun 25, 2013 at 5:49
  • In most code styles, using == is bad practice. When you read the code and see ==, it makes you stop and wonder is it a bug or some special trick. Therefore, it is better when your code is consistent. And == leaves room for a potential error in the future. Because types can change.
    – ixpl0
    Feb 6, 2023 at 13:04
  • I'm not entierly sure I'd claim == makes you think there's a bug or trick... all of us C/++ coders are still wondering why there are 2 equality operators when u could just cast it (hooray weakly typed languages! down w typescript!!). =)
    – Bobdabear
    Jan 5 at 20:46
34

The Boolean object doesn't have a 'parse' method. Boolean('false') returns true, so that won't work. !!'false' also returns true, so that won't work also.

If you want string 'true' to return boolean true and string 'false' to return boolean false, then the simplest solution is to use eval(). eval('true') returns true and eval('false') returns false.

Keep in mind the performance and security implications when using eval() though.

6
  • 1
    To understand what's "wrong" (or right) with eval - check out articles like javascriptweblog.wordpress.com/2010/04/19/how-evil-is-eval or search on stackoverflow for 'Javascript eval malware'
    – GrahamMc
    Nov 22, 2012 at 8:52
  • 3
    I agree that var isTrueSet = (myValue === 'true'); is the best answer.
    – thdoan
    Jan 28, 2013 at 7:35
  • I like that it's concise. But it fails spectacularly for the basic case of eval('TRUE'); proving once again, that eval() is evil.
    – Snowman
    Aug 6, 2015 at 9:41
  • 1
    @10basetom: Quite correct. You should include .toLowerCase() in the answer is my point. I'm not trying to force anything. Uppercase TRUE is a common enough value to be returned by many UI widgets.
    – Snowman
    Aug 7, 2015 at 6:30
  • 4
    Quoting mozzila docs: Warning: Executing JavaScript from a string is an enormous security risk. It is far too easy for a bad actor to run arbitrary code when you use eval(). developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…! Jan 18, 2021 at 15:20
33
var falsy = /^(?:f(?:alse)?|no?|0+)$/i;
Boolean.parse = function(val) { 
    return !falsy.test(val) && !!val;
};

This returns false for every falsy value and true for every truthy value except for 'false', 'f', 'no', 'n', and '0' (case-insensitive).

// False
Boolean.parse(false);
Boolean.parse('false');
Boolean.parse('False');
Boolean.parse('FALSE');
Boolean.parse('f');
Boolean.parse('F');
Boolean.parse('no');
Boolean.parse('No');
Boolean.parse('NO');
Boolean.parse('n');
Boolean.parse('N');
Boolean.parse('0');
Boolean.parse('');
Boolean.parse(0);
Boolean.parse(null);
Boolean.parse(undefined);
Boolean.parse(NaN);
Boolean.parse();

//True
Boolean.parse(true);
Boolean.parse('true');
Boolean.parse('True');
Boolean.parse('t');
Boolean.parse('yes');
Boolean.parse('YES');
Boolean.parse('y');
Boolean.parse('1');
Boolean.parse('foo');
Boolean.parse({});
Boolean.parse(1);
Boolean.parse(-1);
Boolean.parse(new Date());
1
  • 2
    I feel bad for those who don't scroll and just pick the top answer. This answer is robust, reusable, and succinct. I shortened it into a one-liner: Boolean.parse ??= (val) => {return !/^(?:f(?:alse)?|no?|0+)$/i.test(val) && !!val};
    – Bernesto
    Apr 7, 2023 at 0:29
24

There are a lot of answers and it's hard to pick one. In my case, I prioritise the performance when choosing, so I create this jsPerf that I hope can throw some light here.

Brief of results (the higher the better):

  1. Conditional statement: 2,826,922
  2. Switch case on Bool object: 2,825,469
  3. Casting to JSON: 1,867,774
  4. !! conversions: 805,322
  5. Prototype of String: 713,637

They are linked to the related answer where you can find more information (pros and cons) about each one; specially in the comments.

1
  • "something went wrong" when trying to view jsPerf test Feb 2, 2018 at 17:16
21

This has been taken from the accepted answer, but really it has a very weak point, and I am shocked how it got that count of upvotes, the problem with it that you have to consider the case of the string because this is case sensitive

var isTrueSet = (myValue.toLowerCase() === 'true');
1
  • not to mention that .toLowerCase might throw if myValue is equal to null or undefined Jun 14, 2020 at 9:46
19

I use the following:

function parseBool(b) {
    return !(/^(false|0)$/i).test(b) && !!b;
}

This function performs the usual Boolean coercion with the exception of the strings "false" (case insensitive) and "0".

0
19

Simplest solution 🙌🏽

with ES6+

use the logical NOT twice [ !! ] to get the string converted

Just paste this expression...

const stringToBoolean = (string) => string === 'false' ? false : !!string

And pass your string to it!

stringToBoolean('')                 // false
stringToBoolean('false')            // false
stringToBoolean('true')             // true
stringToBoolean('hello my friend!') // true
🤙🏽 Bonus! 🤙🏽
const betterStringToBoolean = (string) => 
  string === 'false' || string === 'undefined' || string === 'null' || string === '0' ?
  false : !!string

You can include other strings at will to easily extend the usage of this expression...:

betterStringToBoolean('undefined')     // false
betterStringToBoolean('null')          // false
betterStringToBoolean('0')             // false
betterStringToBoolean('false')         // false
betterStringToBoolean('')              // false
betterStringToBoolean('true')          // true
betterStringToBoolean('anything else') // true
4
  • How about '1'? Should it be converted to true or false? I think it is should be true, no? But using your answer, it will returns false
    – ksugiarto
    Jun 2, 2021 at 20:11
  • Guess you are doing something wrong bro... I just tested the code and if you input ' 1 ' the return is always true. Don't know how you got that false but I think you must be messing it up in some way Jun 2, 2021 at 22:15
  • Ah sorry! My bad, I was testing the first function instead. Thanks for clarifying this.
    – ksugiarto
    Jun 3, 2021 at 15:38
  • 1
    Your examples are all strings. For example 'null' is not actual null, it's a string with characters null in it.
    – ADTC
    Feb 16, 2023 at 7:20
18

The expression you're looking for simply is

/^true$/i.test(myValue)

as in

var isTrueSet = /^true$/i.test(myValue);

This tests myValue against a regular expression , case-insensitive, and doesn't modify the prototype.

Examples:

/^true$/i.test("true"); // true
/^true$/i.test("TRUE"); // true
/^true$/i.test("tRuE"); // true
/^true$/i.test(" tRuE"); // false (notice the space at the beginning)
/^true$/i.test("untrue"); // false (some other solutions here will incorrectly return true
/^true$/i.test("false");// returns false
/^true$/i.test("xyz");  // returns false
1
  • This is very neat.
    – ADTC
    Feb 16, 2023 at 7:18
17

you can use JSON.parse as follows:

   
var trueOrFalse='True';
result =JSON.parse(trueOrFalse.toLowerCase());
if(result==true)
  alert('this is true');
else 
  alert('this is false');

in this case .toLowerCase is important

1
  • Not guaranteed to return a boolean, though.
    – D. Pardal
    Jul 3, 2020 at 16:26
14
Boolean.parse = function (str) {
  switch (str.toLowerCase ()) {
    case "true":
      return true;
    case "false":
      return false;
    default:
      throw new Error ("Boolean.parse: Cannot convert string to boolean.");
  }
};
2
  • 2
    You can use true.toString() instead of "true" to be even more clean :-)
    – tillda
    Feb 22, 2011 at 11:03
  • Don't change globals, try to keep your changes isolated, maybe create a new function parseBoolean instead Aug 27, 2018 at 17:29
14

There are already so many answers available. But following can be useful in some scenarios.

// One can specify all values against which you consider truthy
var TRUTHY_VALUES = [true, 'true', 1];

function getBoolean(a) {
    return TRUTHY_VALUES.some(function(t) {
        return t === a;
    });
}

This can be useful where one examples with non-boolean values.

getBoolean('aa'); // false
getBoolean(false); //false
getBoolean('false'); //false

getBoolean('true'); // true
getBoolean(true); // true
getBoolean(1); // true
0
14

I'm suprised that includes was not suggested

let bool = "false"
bool = !["false", "0", 0].includes(bool)

You can modify the check for truely or include more conditions (e.g. null, '').

2
  • 1
    hmm, this is perfect Dec 28, 2021 at 8:13
  • I'm using this approach for a framework that parses URL parameters and includes parameters without values as an empty string, something like: example.com?useSpecialFeature ends up as {useSpecialFeature:''}
    – stu0292
    Jan 22, 2022 at 0:47
13

To convert both string("true", "false") and boolean to boolean

('' + flag) === "true"

Where flag can be

 var flag = true
 var flag = "true"
 var flag = false
 var flag = "false"
12

This function can handle string as well as Boolean true/false.

function stringToBoolean(val){
    var a = {
        'true':true,
        'false':false
    };
    return a[val];
}

Demonstration below:

function stringToBoolean(val) {
  var a = {
    'true': true,
    'false': false
  };
  return a[val];
}

console.log(stringToBoolean("true"));

console.log(typeof(stringToBoolean("true")));

console.log(stringToBoolean("false"));

console.log(typeof(stringToBoolean("false")));

console.log(stringToBoolean(true));

console.log(typeof(stringToBoolean(true)));

console.log(stringToBoolean(false));

console.log(typeof(stringToBoolean(false)));

console.log("=============================================");
// what if value was undefined? 
console.log("undefined result:  " + stringToBoolean(undefined));
console.log("type of undefined result:  " + typeof(stringToBoolean(undefined)));
console.log("=============================================");
// what if value was an unrelated string?
console.log("unrelated string result:  " + stringToBoolean("hello world"));
console.log("type of unrelated string result:  " + typeof(stringToBoolean(undefined)));

0
11

One Liner

We just need to account for the "false" string since any other string (including "true") is already true.

function b(v){ return v==="false" ? false : !!v; }

Test

b(true)    //true
b('true')  //true
b(false)   //false
b('false') //false

A more exaustive version

function bool(v){ return v==="false" || v==="null" || v==="NaN" || v==="undefined" || v==="0" ? false : !!v; }

Test

bool(true)        //true
bool("true")      //true
bool(1)           //true
bool("1")         //true
bool("hello")     //true

bool(false)       //false
bool("false")     //false
bool(0)           //false
bool("0")         //false
bool(null)        //false
bool("null")      //false
bool(NaN)         //false
bool("NaN")       //false
bool(undefined)   //false
bool("undefined") //false
bool("")          //false

bool([])          //true
bool({})          //true
bool(alert)       //true
bool(window)      //true
1
  • Any specific reason for using !!v instead of using true directly? Feb 24, 2021 at 8:16
10

I'm using this one

String.prototype.maybeBool = function(){

    if ( ["yes", "true", "1", "on"].indexOf( this.toLowerCase() ) !== -1 ) return true;
    if ( ["no", "false", "0", "off"].indexOf( this.toLowerCase() ) !== -1 ) return false;

    return this;

}

"on".maybeBool(); //returns true;
"off".maybeBool(); //returns false;
"I like js".maybeBool(); //returns "I like js"
3
  • This is good, but works only with String type. Imagine that this need be used by a variable that is maybe "true" or true. If come the second one, this will not work. Is possible make a document.prototypeto use this wherever we want it? Feb 9, 2015 at 18:40
  • This looks elegant. Great job! However, I noticed that overloading basic prototypes in large JS apps (that also need unit testing) might result in some unexpected behaviour (namely, when you want to iterate with "for" through an array that has the prototype overloaded, you'll get some properties that you wouldn't normally expect). You have been warned. ;)
    – cassi.lup
    Mar 11, 2015 at 10:30
  • a variant of yours that accepts boolean too function StringOrElse2Bool(sob){ if (typeof sob === "string") { return ["no", "false", "0", "off"].indexOf( sob.toLowerCase() ) !== -1 ? false : true; } else { return !!sob }
    – bortunac
    Dec 2, 2015 at 11:48
10

why don't you try something like this

Boolean(JSON.parse((yourString.toString()).toLowerCase()));

It will return an error when some other text is given rather than true or false regardless of the case and it will capture the numbers also as

// 0-> false
// any other number -> true
9

You need to separate (in your thinking) the value of your selections and the representation of that value.

Pick a point in the JavaScript logic where they need to transition from string sentinels to native type and do a comparison there, preferably where it only gets done once for each value that needs to be converted. Remember to address what needs to happen if the string sentinel is not one the script knows (i.e. do you default to true or to false?)

In other words, yes, you need to depend on the string's value. :-)

9

another solution. jsFiddle

var toBoolean = function(value) {
    var strValue = String(value).toLowerCase();
    strValue = ((!isNaN(strValue) && strValue !== '0') &&
        strValue !== '' &&
        strValue !== 'null' &&
        strValue !== 'undefined') ? '1' : strValue;
    return strValue === 'true' || strValue === '1' ? true : false
};

test cases run in node

> toBoolean(true)
true
> toBoolean(false)
false
> toBoolean(undefined)
false
> toBoolean(null)
false
> toBoolean('true')
true
> toBoolean('True')
true
> toBoolean('False')
false
> toBoolean('false')
false
> toBoolean('0')
false
> toBoolean('1')
true
> toBoolean('100')
true
> 
8

Hands down the easiest way (assuming you string will be 'true' or 'false') is:

var z = 'true';
var y = 'false';
var b = (z === 'true'); // will evaluate to true
var c = (y === 'true'); // will evaluate to false

Always use the === operator instead of the == operator for these types of conversions!

2
  • 4
    What conversion were you talking about? :-)
    – YMMD
    May 18, 2012 at 0:41
  • 2
    When comparing string in javascript there is no difference between using the == or === operators when not using conversions. Here you are comparing to strings, therefore no type conversions. See stackoverflow.com/questions/359494/…
    – ars265
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:40

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