What is the difference between the &&
and and
operators in Ruby?
8 Answers
and
is the same as &&
but with lower precedence. They both use short-circuit evaluation.
WARNING: and
even has lower precedence than =
so you'll usually want to avoid and
. An example when and
should be used can be found in the Rails Guide under "Avoiding Double Render Errors".
-
61It would be a good idea to specify that one should usually use
&&
, whileand
should be used for very specific cases only. Apr 9, 2012 at 3:05 -
13Another good explanation here: devblog.avdi.org/2010/08/02/using-and-and-or-in-ruby. May 18, 2012 at 5:58
-
21From Andrew Marshall's link: "Another way of thinking about
and
is as a reversedif
statement modifier:next if widget = widgets.pop
becomeswidget = widgets.pop and next
. That's a great way of putting it, really made it "click" in my head. (Andor
is like a reversedunless
modifier.)– GMAOct 29, 2013 at 7:31 -
1Combine this answer with the details of tadman's answer and you get the whole picture.– sargasApr 30, 2014 at 22:14
-
5Avdi updated his take on when to use and vs. &&. Basically use 'and' and 'or' for control flow because of their lower precedence. devblog.avdi.org/2014/08/26/…– EricCNov 6, 2014 at 21:53
The practical difference is binding strength, which can lead to peculiar behavior if you're not prepared for it:
foo = :foo
bar = nil
a = foo and bar
# => nil
a
# => :foo
a = foo && bar
# => nil
a
# => nil
a = (foo and bar)
# => nil
a
# => nil
(a = foo) && bar
# => nil
a
# => :foo
The same thing works for ||
and or
.
-
2
a = foo and bar
and(a = foo ) && bar
proves thatand
has lower precedence than&&
.– sargasApr 30, 2014 at 22:15 -
-
a = foo and bar
is equivalent to(a = :foo) and nil
. Since the assignment returns a logically true value (:foo
) then the second part evaluates, which fails, returningnil
.– tadmanApr 26, 2016 at 7:31
The Ruby Style Guide says it better than I could:
Use &&/|| for boolean expressions, and/or for control flow. (Rule of thumb: If you have to use outer parentheses, you are using the wrong operators.)
# boolean expression
if some_condition && some_other_condition
do_something
end
# control flow
document.saved? or document.save!
-
57Actually the guide now says to avoid
and
/or
completely, and they might have a point. Often their usage in control flow could be more obviously written withif
/unless
operators anyway (e.g.document.save! unless document.saved?
)– YarinSep 14, 2013 at 12:08 -
1@akostadinov in case you weren't trolling: the Ruby Style guide isn't written by the creators of Ruby. Ruby was created by Yukihiro Matsumoto and others, while the Ruby Style Guide was mainly by Bozhidar Batsov. Jul 3, 2014 at 23:03
-
2@AndrewGrimm, thanks, good to know. Sorry for trolling but I'm sincerely confused with some aspects of ruby reality. One thing is sure - every ruby project needs strict style policies to keep the codebase maintainable. Jul 4, 2014 at 7:59
||
and &&
bind with the precedence that you expect from boolean operators in programming languages (&&
is very strong, ||
is slightly less strong).
and
and or
have lower precedence.
For example, unlike ||
, or
has lower precedence than =
:
> a = false || true
=> true
> a
=> true
> a = false or true
=> true
> a
=> false
Likewise, unlike &&
, and
also has lower precedence than =
:
> a = true && false
=> false
> a
=> false
> a = true and false
=> false
> a
=> true
What's more, unlike &&
and ||
, and
and or
bind with equal precedence:
> !puts(1) || !puts(2) && !puts(3)
1
=> true
> !puts(1) or !puts(2) and !puts(3)
1
3
=> true
> !puts(1) or (!puts(2) and !puts(3))
1
=> true
The weakly-binding and
and or
may be useful for control-flow purposes: see http://devblog.avdi.org/2010/08/02/using-and-and-or-in-ruby/ .
-
2"unlike
||
,or
has lower precedence than=
" ...now it makes more sense, thanks! Feb 20, 2014 at 0:16
and
has lower precedence than &&
.
But for an unassuming user, problems might occur if it is used along with other operators whose precedence are in between, for example, the assignment operator:
def happy?() true; end
def know_it?() true; end
todo = happy? && know_it? ? "Clap your hands" : "Do Nothing"
todo
# => "Clap your hands"
todo = happy? and know_it? ? "Clap your hands" : "Do Nothing"
todo
# => true
-
1
-
3
and
has lower precedence, mostly we use it as a control-flow modifier such as if
:
next if widget = widgets.pop
becomes
widget = widgets.pop and next
For or
:
raise "Not ready!" unless ready_to_rock?
becomes
ready_to_rock? or raise "Not ready!"
I prefer to use if
but not and
, because if
is more intelligible, so I just ignore and
and or
.
Refer to "Using “and” and “or” in Ruby" for more information.
and checks only first condition and gives result on other hand && strongly checks both conditions and gives logical result.
I don't know if this is Ruby intention or if this is a bug but try this code below. This code was run on Ruby version 2.5.1 and was on a Linux system.
puts 1 > -1 and 257 < 256
# => false
puts 1 > -1 && 257 < 256
# => true
-
1
-
@BobRodes It wasn't a sarcasm. There are 7 answers, 6 of which already have examples. Feb 14, 2019 at 9:42
-
1
-
I'm getting odd results as well. v1 = true and false p v1 # => app.rb: true, IRB: false v2 = true && false p v2 # => app.rb: false, IRB: false puts 1 > -1 && 257 < 256 # => app.rb: false, IRB: false– Rich_FApr 15, 2019 at 9:31
or
and||
.