So this is more of a theoretical question. C++ and languages (in)directly based on it (Java, C#, PHP) have shortcut operators for assigning the result of most binary operators to the first operand, such as
a += 3; // for a = a + 3
a *= 3; // for a = a * 3;
a <<= 3; // for a = a << 3;
but when I want to toggle a boolean expression I always find myself writing something like
a = !a;
which gets annoying when a
is a long expression like.
this.dataSource.trackedObject.currentValue.booleanFlag =
!this.dataSource.trackedObject.currentValue.booleanFlag;
(yeah, Demeter's Law, I know).
So I was wondering, is there any language with a unary boolean toggle operator that would allow me to abbreviate a = !a
without repeating the expression for a
, for example
!=a;
// or
a!!;
Let's assume that our language has a proper boolean type (like bool
in C++) and that a
is of that type (so no C-style int a = TRUE
).
If you can find a documented source, I'd also be interested to learn whether e.g. the C++ designers have considered adding an operator like that when bool
became a built-in type and if so, why they decided against it.
(Note: I know that some people are of the opinion that assignment should not use
=
and that ++
and +=
are not useful operators but design flaws; let's just assume I'm happy with them and focus on why they would not extend to bools).
void Flip(bool& Flag) { Flag=!Flag; }
The shortens your long expression.this.dataSource.trackedObject.currentValue.booleanFlag ^= 1;
*= -1
though, which for some reason I find more intuitive than^= true
.