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Are not and ! synonyms, or are they evaluated differently?

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3 Answers 3

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They are almost synonymous, but not quite. The difference is that ! has a higher precedence than not, much like && and || are of higher precedence than and and or.

! has the highest precedence of all operators, and not one of the lowest, you can find the full table at the Ruby docs.

As an example, consider:

!true && false
=> false

not true && false
=> true

In the first example, ! has the highest precedence, so you're effectively saying false && false.
In the second example, not has a lower precedence than true && false, so this "switched" the false from true && false to true.

The general guideline seems to be that you should stick to !, unless you have a specific reason to use not. ! in Ruby behaves the same as most other languages, and is "less surprising" than not.

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  • 8
    I have used 'not' in the past to make negated conditionals easier to read. Meaning if the entirety of the conditional should be negated I felt comfortable using 'not' rather than '!'. I like it when my code reads like inglush
    – user483040
    Jul 11, 2016 at 18:17
  • @jaydel Could you use unless in that case?
    – Jacob
    Nov 24, 2017 at 12:09
  • 1
    @Jacob, yes, definitely. unless is just not really favored in the ruby world. The general consensus is that it just gets in the way when ! works just as well in most situations. I'm sure there are cases where unless may be more expressive, but I steer clear.
    – Brennan
    Nov 27, 2017 at 22:29
  • 8
    I disagree that unless is disfavored. The closest thing we have to a consensus says otherwise. Jun 7, 2018 at 16:29
  • 2
    Just wanted to share an example of how surprising not can be. In Python, I sometimes assign booleans to variables to make if-statements easier to read. That might mean using the pattern x = not y, where y is something complex. In Ruby, x = !y works, but x = not y gets syntax error, unexpected tIDENTIFIER, expecting '('. The precedence order means this needs parentheses around the right of the assignment op to work: x = (not y).
    – S. Kirby
    Oct 4, 2018 at 18:00
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An easy way to understand the not operator is by looking at not true && false as being equivalent to !(true && false)

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I have an RSpec-driven example here: Ruby's not keyword is not not but ! (not)

In essence:

  • They differ in precedence
  • They are not aliases
  • ! can be overriden, whereas not cannot be overriden
  • when you override ! then not will be overriden too, hence it must be using ! under the hood
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