Hey I ran into the same problem is the "true" or "false" printed on the page, and there is a simpler way to handle it. What I did is a little weird, and I did it Confluence, which of course uses Velocity under the covers. I mention that because I understand Velocity can be used in may different applications.
With a Confluence user macro, I check for a previously created attribute on the req variable, the request variable, i.e. "myPageVars". Then I use the put method to put a new key-value pair, based on the macro parameters. By using the $! prefix, rather than just $, the output isn't sent to the screen.
...
$!req.getAttribute("myPageVars").put( $paramKey, $paramValue )
...
I'm somewhat new to Velocity, so I can't guarantee this will work in every context, but it seems syntactically easier than the whole #set ($dummy etc. line.