1247

How do I convert a string into a boolean in Python? This attempt returns True:

>>> bool("False")
True
3
  • 4
    i have created a micro-library just for this which also included some foreign words e.g. "tak" for Polish, "'是的" in Mandarin-Chinese will evaluate to True. If not explicitly true-ish will evaluate to False. Suggestions are welcome. Github link: github.com/kmonsoor/str2bool
    – kmonsoor
    Aug 25, 2015 at 12:30
  • But when trying bool("string") it always returns True...except for the empty string bool("")
    – FiddleStix
    Mar 14, 2022 at 15:08
  • You're thinking of Perl ! :-D
    – MikeW
    Mar 28 at 11:23

39 Answers 39

1309

Really, you just compare the string to whatever you expect to accept as representing true, so you can do this:

s == 'True'

Or to checks against a whole bunch of values:

s.lower() in ['true', '1', 't', 'y', 'yes', 'yeah', 'yup', 'certainly', 'uh-huh']

Be cautious when using the following:

>>> bool("foo")
True
>>> bool("")
False

Empty strings evaluate to False, but everything else evaluates to True. So this should not be used for any kind of parsing purposes.

9
  • 69
    +1: Not much could be simpler than s == "True". But I've seen people make a real mess of this. def convert(s): if s == "True": return True; return False.
    – S.Lott
    Apr 3, 2009 at 20:11
  • 42
    I prefer return s == "True" over the if/else
    – Dana
    Apr 3, 2009 at 20:35
  • 41
    if s == "True": return True elif s=="False": return False else: return raise
    – Unknown
    Jul 11, 2009 at 21:43
  • 19
    Parsing strings to booleans is already implemented in distutils.util.strtobool: stackoverflow.com/a/18472142/923599
    – jzwiener
    Aug 28, 2013 at 10:04
  • 39
    I know this is a REALLY old topic, but I wanted to attest that I have just spent 4 hours trying to debug my code. My mistake was trying to cast bool("False"). It will always cast to True.
    – Ev.
    Sep 2, 2016 at 12:37
545

Warning: This answer will no longer work as of Python 3.12 (it's deprecated as of 3.10)

Use:

bool(distutils.util.strtobool(some_string))

True values are y, yes, t, true, on and 1; false values are n, no, f, false, off and 0. Raises ValueError if val is anything else.

Be aware that distutils.util.strtobool() returns integer representations and thus it needs to be wrapped with bool() to get Boolean values.

Given that distutils will no longer be part of the standard library, here is the code for distutils.util.strtobool() (see the source code for 3.11.2).

def strtobool (val):
    """Convert a string representation of truth to true (1) or false (0).
    True values are 'y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', and '1'; false values
    are 'n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', and '0'.  Raises ValueError if
    'val' is anything else.
    """
    val = val.lower()
    if val in ('y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', '1'):
        return 1
    elif val in ('n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', '0'):
        return 0
    else:
        raise ValueError("invalid truth value %r" % (val,))
12
  • 6
    That function is tantalizing. It would be perfect if it handled integers and None and str(None) as input.
    – MarkHu
    Dec 4, 2014 at 6:50
  • 30
    I much prefer this to the higher voted answers... it's from stdlib and does exactly what's required. There is generally no reason to need an actual bool instead of 1/0 as long as you're not doing bad stuff like if x == False... and if you're dealing with ints and Nones you don't need a special function, you can just check them directly if myint: or if not maybe_none_var:
    – Anentropic
    Dec 22, 2014 at 5:41
  • 6
    @Secator bool is a sub-class of int
    – Anentropic
    Dec 22, 2014 at 5:45
  • 25
    To save someone some Googling of errors: import distutils and import distutils.util for this to work.
    – Edward B.
    May 14, 2020 at 20:11
  • 17
    Be aware, that the distutils package is deprecated since python 3.10 and will be removed in version 3.12.
    – jan-di
    Nov 7, 2021 at 1:25
358
def str2bool(v):
  return v.lower() in ("yes", "true", "t", "1")

Then call it like so:

>>> str2bool("yes")
True
>>> str2bool("no")
False
>>> str2bool("stuff")
False
>>> str2bool("1")
True
>>> str2bool("0")
False

Handling true and false explicitly:

You could also make your function explicitly check against a True list of words and a False list of words. Then if it is in neither list, you could throw an exception.

3
  • 50
    little enhancement can be made using, str(v).lower() instead of v.lower(). Then, it can work even it is not string, e.g. 1, 0
    – kmonsoor
    Jan 5, 2015 at 14:30
  • RE: handling true/false explicitly, you could also provide a default value if the string isn't matched, much like how true/false command-line prompts work: Continue? (y/N)
    – Johnus
    Mar 3, 2016 at 3:16
  • Prolly add "y" if you're going to include "t"... Sep 28 at 14:24
190

The JSON parser is also useful for in general converting strings to reasonable python types.

>>> import json
>>> json.loads("false".lower())
False
>>> json.loads("True".lower())
True
3
  • 3
    Be careful though, no validation are done that the return type is a boolean. json.loads("[42]".lower()) -> [42]
    – selle
    Jun 8, 2022 at 14:41
  • why is .lower() needed? When I don't use it, for example x = "False" j = json.loads(x), I get the error json.decoder.JSONDecodeError: Expecting value: line 1 column 1 (char 0) Jul 14, 2022 at 13:16
  • @AmbassadorKosh because JSON only recognizes literal true and false values; see json-schema.org/understanding-json-schema/reference/…
    – Luis
    Sep 12, 2022 at 19:41
130

Since Python 2.6 you can use ast.literal_eval, and it's still available in Python 3.

Evaluate an expression node or a string containing only a Python literal or container display. The string or node provided may only consist of the following Python literal structures: strings, bytes, numbers, tuples, lists, dicts, sets, booleans, None and Ellipsis.

This can be used for evaluating strings containing Python values without the need to parse the values oneself. It is not capable of evaluating arbitrarily complex expressions, for example involving operators or indexing.

This function had been documented as “safe” in the past without defining what that meant. That was misleading. This is specifically designed not to execute Python code, unlike the more general eval(). There is no namespace, no name lookups, or ability to call out. But it is not free from attack: A relatively small input can lead to memory exhaustion or to C stack exhaustion, crashing the process. There is also the possibility for excessive CPU consumption denial of service on some inputs. Calling it on untrusted data is thus not recommended.

Which seems to work, as long as you're sure your strings are going to be either "True" or "False":

>>> ast.literal_eval("True")
True
>>> ast.literal_eval("False")
False
>>> ast.literal_eval("F")
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/ast.py", line 68, in literal_eval
    return _convert(node_or_string)
  File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/ast.py", line 67, in _convert
    raise ValueError('malformed string')
ValueError: malformed string
>>> ast.literal_eval("'False'")
'False'

I wouldn't normally recommend this, but it is completely built-in and could be the right thing depending on your requirements.

6
  • 2
    Not sure of the general applicability of this solution, but it's very nice, in a general sort of way. +1! Jul 11, 2009 at 21:04
  • 5
    Gaah, that's horrifying! Then again, you did say you don't recommend it, and it does answer the question neatly. Good find! Dec 17, 2013 at 22:19
  • 9
    Unfortunately it doesn't handle this case >>>ast.literal_eval('true') or ast.literal_eval('TRUE') Raises >>> raise ValueError('malformed string') The fix is simple though ast.literal_eval(to_test.title())
    – Bhushan
    May 8, 2014 at 3:13
  • Not a great solution to this particular question, but... Wow, literal_eval is damn useful! String to list, dict, ect.
    – travc
    Oct 25, 2014 at 23:48
  • Does it work on unicodes to? In my Django view I have an incoming value which I want to change to boolean, it is giving a malformed string exception.
    – praxmon
    Sep 8, 2015 at 5:11
92

WARNING: Do not use the following code unless you actually know what you are doing with it. Please read the attached disclaimers and make sure you trust your inputs as using this on untrusted inputs could destroy your data and/or cost you your job.

If you know the string will be either "True" or "False", you could just use eval(s).

>>> eval("True")
True
>>> eval("False")
False

Only use this if you are sure of the contents of the string though, as it will throw an exception if the string does not contain valid Python, and will also execute code contained in the string.

8
  • 22
    that string will come from somewhere. if eval(os.environ["LOL"]): #might never reach here. Might also charge your company's credit card.
    – nurettin
    Jan 23, 2019 at 16:10
  • 4
    @nurettin, hence my comment about only using it if you're sure of the contents of the string. Feb 24, 2019 at 16:28
  • 12
    please please please, there are a LOT safer options above, why would you want to use eval for a simple string comparison you can never be 100% certain that a piece of code is going to stay the same and behave the same over time but there's a slight chance that you leave the eval in there then the disaster soup is ready
    – slajma
    Sep 25, 2020 at 20:52
  • 2
    This is the correct answer I was googling for. eval("True") = True and eval("False") = False. Simple. I use it to ping a config file for booleans.
    – Kris M
    Jan 3, 2021 at 14:18
  • 3
    Part of me says capital letter "WARNING" is in order. On the other hand the other part says if someone is dumb enough to copy-paste the answer without thinking what it really does, they kinda deserved to be hacked May 12, 2022 at 23:58
28

NOTE: DON'T EVER USE eval() if it takes an input directly or indirectly from the user because it is highly subject to abuse:

eval('os.system(‘rm -rf /’)')

But cheers! Study finds also that eval() is not evil and it is perfectly OK for TRUSTED CODE. You can use it to convert a boolean string such as "False" and "True" to a boolean type.


I would like to share my simple solution: use the eval(). It will convert the string True and False to proper boolean type IF the string is exactly in title format True or False always first letter capital or else the function will raise an error.

e.g.

>>> eval('False')
False

>>> eval('True')
True

Of course for dynamic variable you can simple use the .title() to format the boolean string.

>>> x = 'true'
>>> eval(x.title())
True

This will throw an error.

>>> eval('true')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'true' is not defined

>>> eval('false')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'false' is not defined
3
  • 11
    wow, for anyone finding this: do NOT use this for anything else than simple scripts. If you use this in any serious application you will open yourself up to all kinds of unwanted code execution. Imagine a scenario where you parse input from a user and to convert a string to a boolean you use this. In this scenario an attacker can basically do anything that your code does. Don't trust me? Try this: import os eval("os.getcwd()") Jun 20, 2020 at 20:26
  • 2
    @MartinBraun Ah yes study finds that you can execute this eval('os.system(‘rm -rf /’)') and it deletes all the files in that directory. However eval() are perfectly OK for a trusted code it is not really evil. So I better put a note to be careful. Jun 21, 2020 at 19:48
  • How about literal_eval?
    – Nishant
    Apr 18, 2022 at 11:24
21

This version keeps the semantics of constructors like int(value) and provides an easy way to define acceptable string values.

valid = {'true': True, 't': True, '1': True,
         'false': False, 'f': False, '0': False,
         }

def to_bool(value):
    """Convert string value to boolean."""

    if isinstance(value, bool):
        return value

    if not isinstance(value, basestring):
        raise ValueError('invalid literal for boolean. Not a string.')

    lower_value = value.lower()
    if lower_value in valid:
        return valid[lower_value]
    else:
        raise ValueError('invalid literal for boolean: "%s"' % value)


# Test cases
assert to_bool('true'), '"true" is True' 
assert to_bool('True'), '"True" is True' 
assert to_bool('TRue'), '"TRue" is True' 
assert to_bool('TRUE'), '"TRUE" is True' 
assert to_bool('T'), '"T" is True' 
assert to_bool('t'), '"t" is True' 
assert to_bool('1'), '"1" is True' 
assert to_bool(True), 'True is True' 
assert to_bool(u'true'), 'unicode "true" is True'

assert to_bool('false') is False, '"false" is False' 
assert to_bool('False') is False, '"False" is False' 
assert to_bool('FAlse') is False, '"FAlse" is False' 
assert to_bool('FALSE') is False, '"FALSE" is False' 
assert to_bool('F') is False, '"F" is False' 
assert to_bool('f') is False, '"f" is False' 
assert to_bool('0') is False, '"0" is False' 
assert to_bool(False) is False, 'False is False'
assert to_bool(u'false') is False, 'unicode "false" is False'

# Expect ValueError to be raised for invalid parameter...
try:
    to_bool('')
    to_bool(12)
    to_bool([])
    to_bool('yes')
    to_bool('FOObar')
except ValueError, e:
    pass
2
  • 6
    Nit: Your last "test case" will error out on the first call and not test the others. Also, it will not fail if an error is not raised.
    – augurar
    Mar 14, 2017 at 7:35
  • 1
    The definition of valid should be placed outside the function, or the dict will be rebuilt on every call, removing the majority of the performance benefit of using a dict in the first place. Jul 1, 2022 at 1:39
21

There is an elegant solution with pydantic:

For pydantic >=2:

from pydantic import TypeAdapter
    
>>> TypeAdapter(bool).validate_python("true")
True

>>> TypeAdapter(bool).validate_python("off")
False

For pydantic <2:

import pydantic
    
>>> pydantic.parse_obj_as(bool, "true")
True

>>> pydantic.parse_obj_as(bool, "off")
False
17

you could always do something like

my_string = "false"
val = (my_string == "true")

the bit in parens would evaluate to False. This is just another way to do it without having to do an actual function call.

2
  • 1
    What is the val = "false" line doing on this example? Why is it there? What does it mean?
    – S.Lott
    Apr 3, 2009 at 20:13
  • this exactly what I was looking for, evaluating an input field from a file and based on the outcome storing a boolean. thank you.
    – jimh
    Mar 2, 2017 at 0:41
15

Here's is my version. It checks against both positive and negative values lists, raising an exception for unknown values. And it does not receive a string, but any type should do.

def to_bool(value):
    """
       Converts 'something' to boolean. Raises exception for invalid formats
           Possible True  values: 1, True, "1", "TRue", "yes", "y", "t"
           Possible False values: 0, False, None, [], {}, "", "0", "faLse", "no", "n", "f", 0.0, ...
    """
    if str(value).lower() in ("yes", "y", "true",  "t", "1"): return True
    if str(value).lower() in ("no",  "n", "false", "f", "0", "0.0", "", "none", "[]", "{}"): return False
    raise Exception('Invalid value for boolean conversion: ' + str(value))

Sample runs:

>>> to_bool(True)
True
>>> to_bool("tRUe")
True
>>> to_bool("1")
True
>>> to_bool(1)
True
>>> to_bool(2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 9, in to_bool
Exception: Invalid value for boolean conversion: 2
>>> to_bool([])
False
>>> to_bool({})
False
>>> to_bool(None)
False
>>> to_bool("Wasssaaaaa")
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 9, in to_bool
Exception: Invalid value for boolean conversion: Wasssaaaaa
>>>
6
  • One could get bitten by this: to_bool(["hello"]) which should be a perfectly valid call, if [] is supported
    – Rafael T
    Mar 4, 2013 at 0:06
  • 1
    Returns "Exception: Invalid value for boolean conversion: ['hello']", which is expected and documented. In my opinion an empty list was clearly a false, but ['false'] wasn't clearly anything, so I left it out intentionally - that's a feature not a bug. Should be easy to add support for returning true for non-empty lists if that's what you want.
    – Petrucio
    Mar 5, 2013 at 7:39
  • 1
    shure you documented it. But in real live one would never call to_bool([]). Instead he would do something along these lines: myList=someFunctionThatReturnAList `if (is_bool(myList)):...´ so one have a list and want to know if this list is None or empty.
    – Rafael T
    Mar 5, 2013 at 16:12
  • Why not try this: >>> def a2b(arg): ... default = bool(arg) ... if isinstance(arg, str): ... return arg.lower() in ['true', 't', 'yes', 'y', '1'] ... else: ... return default Jun 12, 2013 at 19:12
  • 5
    Minor point: you should probably prefer ValueError over a plain Exception.
    – dshepherd
    Apr 7, 2015 at 14:25
13

A cool, simple trick (based on what @Alan Marchiori posted), but using yaml:

import yaml

parsed = yaml.load("true")
print bool(parsed)

If this is too wide, it can be refined by testing the type result. If the yaml-returned type is a str, then it can't be cast to any other type (that I can think of anyway), so you could handle that separately, or just let it be true.

I won't make any guesses at speed, but since I am working with yaml data under Qt gui anyway, this has a nice symmetry.

3
  • 2
    The yaml module is a third party library: PyYAML
    – Peter Wood
    Jun 28, 2018 at 8:00
  • 1
    for more security against untrusted input yaml.safe_load instead of yaml.load
    – dreftymac
    May 15, 2021 at 22:05
  • This one is nice because it will also handle on and off
    – Laurenz
    Jul 11 at 16:01
10

A dict (really, a defaultdict) gives you a pretty easy way to do this trick:

from collections import defaultdict
bool_mapping = defaultdict(bool) # Will give you False for non-found values
for val in ['True', 'yes', ...]:
    bool_mapping[val] = True

print(bool_mapping['True']) # True
print(bool_mapping['kitten']) # False

If you only want to map known values and throw an exception otherwise:

truthy_strings = ['True', 'yes']  # ... and so on
falsy_strings = ['False', 'no']   # ... and so on

bool_mapping = {}
for v in truthy_strings:
    bool_mapping[v] = True
for v in falsy_strings:
    bool_mapping[v] = False

If you want to be too clever by half, you can shorten this with itertools

from itertools import chain, repeat

bool_mapping = dict(chain(zip(truthy_strings, repeat(True)), zip(falsy_strings, repeat(False))))

This is probably dumb but itertools tricks are vaguely amusing.

9

I don't agree with any solution here, as they are too permissive. This is not normally what you want when parsing a string.

So here the solution I'm using:

def to_bool(bool_str):
    """Parse the string and return the boolean value encoded or raise an exception"""
    if isinstance(bool_str, basestring) and bool_str: 
        if bool_str.lower() in ['true', 't', '1']: return True
        elif bool_str.lower() in ['false', 'f', '0']: return False

    #if here we couldn't parse it
    raise ValueError("%s is no recognized as a boolean value" % bool_str)

And the results:

>>> [to_bool(v) for v in ['true','t','1','F','FALSE','0']]
[True, True, True, False, False, False]
>>> to_bool("")
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "<stdin>", line 8, in to_bool
ValueError: '' is no recognized as a boolean value

Just to be clear because it looks as if my answer offended somebody somehow:

The point is that you don't want to test for only one value and assume the other. I don't think you always want to map Absolutely everything to the non parsed value. That produces error prone code.

So, if you know what you want code it in.

8
  • 3
    I think you're missing the point: the point of the answers was to demonstrate the general principle, not to tell person who asked the question exactly how they should do it. The person who asked the question originally was overthinking what's actually a simple problem. Nov 26, 2012 at 10:37
  • 9
    @Keith I disagree. The point is answering the question as it is asked.
    – estani
    Nov 26, 2012 at 10:45
  • 2
    The question asked was how to convert a string to a boolean. That was the question I answered. I have no idea what's considered a valid boolean string for the original poster, and nor do you. That's why it's more important to demonstrate the general principle than give the poster the full answer. The original poster didn't need everything spelled out to them: all they needed was for the general principle to be demonstrated. From that, anybody competent will get to your answer. Nov 26, 2012 at 10:53
  • 3
    @dshepherd the isinstance is there to be sure I'm parsing what I expect. I'm parsing strings so a method car_race.lower() that by chance returns '1' shouldn't return true, it should throw a ValueError. But it might suffice in other cases.
    – estani
    Apr 7, 2015 at 16:42
  • 2
    @CivFan interesting point. Though I tried it, and it didn't read so nice (to me). elif is redundant because of the return word, but it gives you more information without having to scan for return. But that's only me, if there's a PEP style violation, I would change it though. Without any other constrain, we should always go for readability (and standards do that). Thanks for the heads up and interesting comment!
    – estani
    Apr 12, 2015 at 13:03
8

By using below simple logic you can convert a string say a = 'true' or 'false', to boolean.

a = a.lower() == 'true'

if a == 'true' then this will set a=True and if a == 'false' then a=False.

3
  • and what if a = '0' ?
    – sagi
    Mar 31, 2022 at 6:18
  • @sagi -Then we can use: a = (str(a).lower() == 'true') | (str(a).lower() == '1') Jul 17, 2022 at 5:30
  • But this also converts "truee"to true. generally we want an exception if the input is invalid
    – Neuron
    Jul 20, 2022 at 16:18
6

Yet another option

from ansible.module_utils.parsing.convert_bool import boolean
boolean('no')
# False
boolean('yEs')
# True
boolean('true')
# True
6

I use

# function
def to_bool(x):
    return x in ("True", "true", True)

# test cases
[[x, to_bool(x)] for x in [True, "True", "true", False, "False", "false", None, 1, 0, -1, 123]]
"""
Result:
[[True, True],
 ['True', True],
 ['true', True],
 [False, False],
 ['False', False],
 ['false', False],
 [None, False],
 [1, True],
 [0, False],
 [-1, False],
 [123, False]]
"""
5

You probably already have a solution but for others who are looking for a method to convert a value to a boolean value using "standard" false values including None, [], {}, and "" in addition to false, no , and 0.

def toBoolean( val ):
    """ 
    Get the boolean value of the provided input.

        If the value is a boolean return the value.
        Otherwise check to see if the value is in 
        ["false", "f", "no", "n", "none", "0", "[]", "{}", "" ]
        and returns True if value is not in the list
    """

    if val is True or val is False:
        return val

    falseItems = ["false", "f", "no", "n", "none", "0", "[]", "{}", "" ]

    return not str( val ).strip().lower() in falseItems
1
  • 1
    it's better to use sets, not in and your selection of false items is somewhat idiosyncratic. Jan 15, 2010 at 18:31
5

If you have control over the entity that's returning true/false, one option is to have it return 1/0 instead of true/false, then:

boolean_response = bool(int(response))

The extra cast to int handles responses from a network, which are always string.

Update 2021: "which are always string" -- this is a naive observation. It depends on the serialization protocol used by the library. Default serialization of high-level libraries (the ones used by most web devs) is typically to convert to string before being serialized to bytes. And then on the other side, it's deserialized from bytes to string, so you've lost any type information.

5

If you know that your input will be either "True" or something else, then why not use:

def bool_convert(s):
    return s == "True"
2
  • You actually don't need the if s else False bit. Think about how "False" == "True" will already return False. Nov 10, 2016 at 1:30
  • If you are unsure if the input s is a string or already a boolean, you can add if type(s) is bool: return s.
    – kontur
    Nov 15, 2017 at 8:06
4

The usual rule for casting to a bool is that a few special literals (False, 0, 0.0, (), [], {}) are false and then everything else is true, so I recommend the following:

def boolify(val):
    if (isinstance(val, basestring) and bool(val)):
        return not val in ('False', '0', '0.0')
    else:
        return bool(val)
0
4

You can also evaluate any string literal :

import ast
ast.literal_eval('True')  # True
type(ast.literal_eval('True'))  # <class 'bool'>


ls = '[1, 2, 3]'
ast.literal_eval(ls)  # [1, 2, 3]
type(ast.literal_eval(ls))  # <class 'list'>
4

If you like me just need boolean from variable which is string. You can use distils as mentioned by @jzwiener. However I could not import and use the module as he suggested.

Instead I end up using it this way on python3.7

distutils string to bool in python

from distutils import util # to handle str to bool conversion
enable_deletion = 'False'
enable_deletion = bool(util.strtobool(enable_deletion))

distutils is part of the python std lib, so no need to install anything, which is great! 👍

2
  • 2
    Be aware, that the distutils package is deprecated since python 3.10 and will be removed in version 3.12.
    – jan-di
    Nov 7, 2021 at 1:25
  • Like everything else in life, good things come to an end :( May 4, 2022 at 10:48
3

This is the version I wrote. Combines several of the other solutions into one.

def to_bool(value):
    """
    Converts 'something' to boolean. Raises exception if it gets a string it doesn't handle.
    Case is ignored for strings. These string values are handled:
      True: 'True', "1", "TRue", "yes", "y", "t"
      False: "", "0", "faLse", "no", "n", "f"
    Non-string values are passed to bool.
    """
    if type(value) == type(''):
        if value.lower() in ("yes", "y", "true",  "t", "1"):
            return True
        if value.lower() in ("no",  "n", "false", "f", "0", ""):
            return False
        raise Exception('Invalid value for boolean conversion: ' + value)
    return bool(value)

If it gets a string it expects specific values, otherwise raises an Exception. If it doesn't get a string, just lets the bool constructor figure it out. Tested these cases:

test_cases = [
    ('true', True),
    ('t', True),
    ('yes', True),
    ('y', True),
    ('1', True),
    ('false', False),
    ('f', False),
    ('no', False),
    ('n', False),
    ('0', False),
    ('', False),
    (1, True),
    (0, False),
    (1.0, True),
    (0.0, False),
    ([], False),
    ({}, False),
    ((), False),
    ([1], True),
    ({1:2}, True),
    ((1,), True),
    (None, False),
    (object(), True),
    ]
1
  • 1
    Use str instead of type('')
    – pppery
    May 10, 2017 at 19:06
3

In python version 3.10 you could do something like this;

def stringToBool(string: str) -> bool:
    match(string.lower()):
        case 'true':
            return True
        case 'false':
            return False

The match-statement is equivalent to switch in C++.

2

I completely agree with the solution of @Jacob\ Gabrielson but the thing is ast.literal_eval only work with string value of True and False not with true or false. So you just have to use .title() for it to work

import ast
ast.literal_eval("false".title())
# or
ast.literal_eval("False".title())
1
  • does not solve the problem that the string might be "0". >>> type(ast.literal_eval("0".title())) <class 'int'>
    – sagi
    Mar 31, 2022 at 6:19
2

Use this solution:

def to_bool(value) -> bool:
    if value == 'true':
        return True
    elif value == 'True':
        return True
    elif value == 'false':
        return False
    elif value == 'False':
        return False
    elif value == 0:
        return False
    elif value == 1:
        return True
    else:
        raise ValueError("Value was not recognized as a valid Boolean.")
1
  • 1
    I like this, because its one of the only solutions dealing with incorrect input properly
    – Neuron
    Jul 21, 2022 at 7:28
1

I realize this is an old post, but some of the solutions require quite a bit of code, here's what I ended up using:

def str2bool(value):
    return {"True": True, "true": True}.get(value, False)
1
  • 9
    That's functionally equivalent to, and more complex than: return value in ('True', 'true') Aug 28, 2013 at 10:48
1

Use package str2bool pip install str2bool

1

I was also required to change the input to bool for a function and the main input was only True or False in string. So, I just coded it like this:

def string_to_bool(s):
    bool_flag = True
    if s == "False":
        bool_flag = False
    elif s == "True":
        bool_flag = True
    else:
        print("Invalid Input")
    return bool_flag

You can also check it for more shortened for True and False like Y/N or y/n etc.

3
  • The extra bool_flag variable is so useless
    – BlakBat
    Feb 17, 2022 at 16:07
  • @BlakBat How? Can you explain why it is useless?
    – ARHAM RUMI
    Feb 22, 2022 at 20:24
  • Just return the value: if s == "False": return False. etc.
    – BlakBat
    Mar 2, 2022 at 15:20

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