-3

Why is the following code:

# Get new_status
print STDERR "Please enter status value (active/inactive): ";
ReadMode(1);
my $new_status = ReadLine(0);
ReadMode(0);
print STDERR "\n";

if ( ($new_status ne "active") || ($new_status ne "inactive") )
{
  die "Status must be active/inactive.";
}

will always return "Status must be active/inactive." no matter what I type? (active, inactive, or anything else, or even just press enter.)

The code appears to be valid:

  • I clearly separate both statement with brackets
  • I use the string operator "ne" in both cases
  • I use the OR operator ||

There's obviously something about Perl operators I am not fully grasping. What am I doing wrong?

Thank you !

0

4 Answers 4

2

$new_status can't be equal to active and inactive at the same time, so condition is always true. You probably need && instead of ||

Choose any option that looks more intuitive to you:

# option 1
if ( ($new_status ne "active") && ($new_status ne "inactive") )
...
# option 2
unless ( ($new_status eq "active") || ($new_status eq "inactive") )
...
#option 3
my %VALID_STATUS = (
    'active' => 1,
    'inactive' => 1,
);
if (!$VALID_STATUS{$new_status})
...
3
  • I down voted that answer because you're assuming I don't know the difference between AND or OR, and that I am trying to get a status that is both active and inactive which is not the case.
    – Bluz
    Mar 14, 2019 at 13:57
  • 3
    @Bluz Well, you actually used an || instead of a &&... I mean, this isn't a big deal: it has happened to pretty much everybody. But this answer is correct, and there is definitely no justification for downvoting it.
    – Dada
    Mar 14, 2019 at 14:54
  • 1
    Please don't use unless for anything but trivial checks; having to distribute an implicit negation confuses too many people.
    – ikegami
    Mar 14, 2019 at 23:48
2
if ( ($new_status ne "active") || ($new_status ne "inactive") )
{
  die "Status must be active/inactive.";
}

Let's work through the logic.

  1. I type something random (let's use random). random isn't "active" and isn't "inactive", so your if clause becomes if (true or true) - which is true.
  2. I type active. That's false on the first check and true on the second check, so you get if (false or true) - which is true.
  3. I type inactive. That's true on the first check and false on the second, so you get if (true or false) - which is true.

There is nothing you can enter that makes your if statement false.

Your problem that you don't want to join your two clauses with or, you should use and instead.

(And take a tip from this old programmer - using and and or instead of && and || for flow control will be far less confusing.)

Update: All in all, there are too many negatives in your code and you're confusing yourself. In your answer, you (silently!) change the if to an unless, thereby making the code even harder to follow for a maintenance programmer.

I'd write it like this:

my $valid = $new_status eq 'active' || $new_status eq 'inactive';
if (not $valid) {
   die "...";
}

Or like this:

use List::Util 'any';

if (not any { $new_status eq $_ } qw[active inactive] ) {
  die "...";
}
2
  • 2
    Please don't recommend the use of not/or/and outside of flow control (or die, or last, or return, etc). It leads to errors such as the one I had to fix in your answer.
    – ikegami
    Mar 14, 2019 at 23:46
  • @ikegami: Damn. You're right. Ignoring my own best practice there. Sorry about that.
    – Dave Cross
    Mar 15, 2019 at 5:27
2

You only want to display the error message if $new_status isn't active AND if $new_status isn't inactive, so

if ( $new_status ne "active" || $new_status ne "inactive" )

should be

if ( $new_status ne "active" && $new_status ne "inactive" )

We can prove this. Remember De Morgan's laws.

  • !( A || B ) is equivalent to !A && !B.
  • !( A && B ) is equivalent to !A || !B.

So,

  • Valid input if $new_status eq 'active' || $new_status eq 'inactive'
  • Invalid input if !( $new_status eq 'active' || $new_status eq 'inactive' )
  • Invalid input if !( $new_status eq 'active' ) && !( $new_status eq 'inactive' )
  • Invalid input if $new_status ne 'active' && $new_status ne 'inactive'

You will need to become accustomed to seeing the following:

if ( $new_status ne "active" && $new_status ne "inactive" ) {
   die("Status must be active/inactive.\n");
}

But you might prefer to use an assertive style of coding instead.

$new_status eq "active" || $new_status eq "inactive"    # Thing that should be true.
   or die("Status must be active/inactive.\n");         # Or what to do when it isn't.
-5

So I found the answer to my question.

The issue is with formatting.

I added:

print Dumper $new_status;

in my code and the output was:

$VAR1 = 'active
';

So I added a :

chomp $new_status;

and now its working perfectly.

$VAR1 = 'active';

Final code:

# Get new_status
print STDERR "Please enter status value (active/inactive): ";
ReadMode(1);
my $new_status = ReadLine(0);
ReadMode(0);
print STDERR "\n";

chomp $new_status;

unless ( ($new_status eq "active") || ($new_status eq "inactive") )
{
  die "Status must be active/inactive.";
}
2
  • 1
    And you replace the if with an unless, that's definitely not a detail.
    – Dada
    Mar 14, 2019 at 14:53
  • Actually, they made they made three relevant changes: if→unless, ne→eq, ne→eq (The change in formatting is not relevant.)
    – ikegami
    Mar 15, 2019 at 0:17

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