14

How can I get the opposite of a boolean in Ruby (I know that it is converted to 0/1) using a method inline?

say I have the given instance:

class Vote

  def return_opposite
    self.value
  end

end

Which obviously doesn't do anything, but I can't seem to find a method that is simple and short something like opposite() or the like. Does something like this exist and I'm just not looking at the right place in the docs? If one doesn't exist is there a really short ternary that would toggle it from 1 => 0 or 0 => 1?

3
  • 2
    welp.. It's a condition so I just used ! Jan 17, 2010 at 2:10
  • Was just about to post to that effect. If you want the opposite of true or false, you can't do much better.
    – Ben
    Jan 17, 2010 at 2:15
  • Ruby has ternary expressions, right? If you want to be baroque you could say self.value ? false : true. But I'd only code that to annoy someone ;) Jan 17, 2010 at 2:20

9 Answers 9

26

I like to use this

@object.boolean = [email protected]
22

Boolean expressions are not 0 or 1 in Ruby, actually, 0 is not false

If n is numeric we are swapping 0 and 1...

n == 0 ? 1 : 0 # or...
1 - n          # or...
[1, 0][n]      # or maybe [1, 0][n & 1] # or...
class Integer; def oh_1; self==0 ? 1:0; end; end; p [12.oh_1, 0.oh_1, 1.oh_1] # or...
n.succ % 2     # or...
n ^= 1

If b already makes sense as a Ruby true or false conditional, it's going to be hard to beat:

!b

These examples differ in how they treat out-of-range input...

1
  • Thanks for the input on the 0 != false... It was me being an idiot and looking at a record in my db, it seems active record writes it as 0 Jan 17, 2010 at 5:01
8

You can use XOR operator (exclusive or)

a = true
a # => true
a ^= true
a # => false
a ^= true
a # => true
5

Edit: See comment by @philomory below.


I believe this is basically an oversight in the boolean classes (TrueClass and FalseClass) in Ruby.

You can negate any object:

nil.! => true
false.! => true
true.! => false
0.! => false
1.! => false
a.! => false (all other objects)

But you cannot in-place negate the boolean objects:

a.!! => does not compile

I guess this would call for trouble with the compiler's grammar.

The best you can do, is thus:

a = a.!
3
  • 2
    While it's true that a.!! is a syntax error, the reason is far deeper than just a grammar issue or an oversight in TrueClass and FalseClass. Variables are not objects and objects are not variables; variable name objects (refer to them, hold them, however you want to term it), and the only thing that changes the value of a variable within a given scope is an assignment. If a.!! couldn't ever be a re-assignment of a different object to a, it would have to be a mutation of the object that a names. But there is only one true, and it is immutable. (cont)
    – philomory
    Jul 10, 2016 at 0:16
  • 1
    (cont) If you could mutate it, then true.!! would permanently change the meaning of true throughout the entire system. In any case, the common idiom !!a doesn't parse as equivalent to a.!!(), it's equivalent to a.!().!(). But again, that returns a 'boolean' value, it doesn't mutate the receiver (at least, given any of the core class definitions of the ! method; you could certainly make one that acts as a mutator for a custom class, but outside of certain overly clever DSLs it'd be extremely confusing behavior to encounter).
    – philomory
    Jul 10, 2016 at 0:19
  • 1
    1.!.! compiles in 2.6.3
    – EugZol
    Nov 28, 2019 at 16:23
3

If you just want to access the opposite of the value, use ! as some people have said in the comments. If you want to actually change the value, that would be bool_value = !bool_value. Unless I've misunderstood your question. Which is quite possible.

2

In order to toggle a boolean data in rails you can do this vote.toggle!(:boolean)

1

If you want to toggle boolean (that is false and true) , that would be as simple as just use ! as others has stated.

If you want to toggle between 0 and 1 , I can only think of something naive as below :)

def opposite
     op = {0=>1,1=>0}
     op[self.value]
end
1
  • 4
    For toggling between 0 and 1: op = 1 - op. Or, if you think in bits, op ^= 1 Jan 17, 2010 at 3:32
0

In a Rails app, I use this method to toggle a post between paused and active, so ! (not) is my preferred method.

def toggle
  @post = Post.find(params[:id])

  @post.update_attributes paused: [email protected]?

  msg = @post.paused? ? 'The post is now paused.' : 'The post is now active.' 

  redirect_to :back, notice: msg
end
0

I think that using a ternary can be interesting :

check = false
check == true ? check = false : check = true
3
  • Hey there! This question is regarding Ruby. Jun 1, 2021 at 11:50
  • Hey, Yes, it's in ruby. I changed my variable name, maybe that's what made you think it was something else than ruby.
    – Nekå
    Jun 1, 2021 at 16:01
  • idiomatic Ruby would be check = check ? true : false
    – go2null
    Mar 25 at 22:06

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