550

Is there a really easy way to toggle a boolean value in javascript?

So far, the best I've got outside of writing a custom function is the ternary:

bool = bool ? false : true;
0

9 Answers 9

1219
bool = !bool;

This holds true in most languages.

10
  • 12
    really nice solution, i was using: test = (test == true)? false : true;
    – alpera
    Jan 19, 2014 at 15:46
  • 1
    This need initialisation, so is there a way without initialisation. Though this would work on object attributes. May 16, 2014 at 14:40
  • 18
    @user2846569, if you're toggling the boolean, that means that by nature the variable has already been initialized. You could expand it to bool = !bool || true; to have a default, I suppose.
    – Jordan
    May 22, 2014 at 0:53
  • 3
    @Jordan That causes ReferenceError May 23, 2014 at 11:12
  • 1
    J.B wants a unary statement rather than binary statement. Perhaps it could be bool!! or !!bool. But so far i've never seen such syntax. I agree with Jordan. It is so short already. Nov 6, 2014 at 5:04
123

If you don't mind the boolean being converted to a number (that is either 0 or 1), you can use the Bitwise XOR Assignment Operator. Like so:

bool ^= true;   //- toggle value.

This is especially good if you use long, descriptive boolean names, EG:
let inDynamicEditMode   = true;     // Value is: true (boolean)
inDynamicEditMode      ^= true;     // Value is: 0 (number)
inDynamicEditMode      ^= true;     // Value is: 1 (number)
inDynamicEditMode      ^= true;     // Value is: 0 (number)

This is easier for me to scan than repeating the variable in each line.

This method works in all (major) browsers (and most programming languages).

3
  • 22
    Since this recasts to an integer anyway, it can be simplified as: bool ^= 1 Oct 23, 2013 at 16:14
  • 63
    As the value is casted to a number, you will be not able to do bool === false or bool === true anymore. It might break existing code, so be careful. Jan 20, 2014 at 9:22
  • This is horrible, please don't Feb 13 at 13:33
16

Let's see this in action:

var b = true;

console.log(b); // true

b = !b;
console.log(b); // false

b = !b;
console.log(b); // true

Anyways, there is no shorter way than what you currently have.

0
13
bool = bool != true;

One of the cases.

0
5

I was searching after a toggling method that does the same, but which "toggles" an initial value of null or undefined to false.

Here it is:

booly = !(booly != false)
0
2

This is an old question but I think a ES6 update will be good.

Usually we want a toggle that can handle everything without breaking our code.

We can use an initial value for null or undefined values as false.

const boolToggler = b => !(b ?? false)

let foo
console.log('foo:', foo) // undefined

foo = boolToggler(foo)
console.log('foo:', foo) // true (assumes undefined as 'false')

foo = boolToggler(foo)
console.log('foo:', foo); // false

let fee = null
console.log('fee:', fee) // null

fee = boolToggler(fee)
console.log('fee:', fee) // true (assumes null as 'false')

let faa = true
console.log('faa:', faa) // true

faa = boolToggler(faa)
console.log('faa:', faa); // false

1
  • Isn't !(b ?? false) kind of redundant since it's being fed into the ! operator? null and undefined are falsy anyway so the same behavior can be achieved with !b
    – Slackow
    Aug 31, 2023 at 17:35
1
bool === tool ? bool : tool

if you want the value to hold true if tool (another boolean) has the same value

1

In a case where you may be storing true / false as strings, such as in localStorage where the protocol flipped to multi object storage in 2009 & then flipped back to string only in 2011 - you can use JSON.parse to interpret to boolean on the fly:

this.sidebar = !JSON.parse(this.sidebar);
1
  • In case the variable has a different values for true/false like "Yes"/"No", I use sidebar = (sidebar == trueValue) falseValue : trueValue;
    – alans
    Feb 8, 2021 at 22:29
0

I always liked Boolean value, but nowadays I'm using binary for both convenience and debugging. You can use de consept !key : ++key: --key to toggle, and if you are in any asynchronous function or anytime an error or false true occurs, the value will leak out of 0(zero)/ 1(one) and you can trigger an alert to debug later.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.