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Is there any sort of style consensus on the following two coding styles? I'm more curious if this is the sort of thing where one is generally preferred in good code in C#, or if this the sort of thing that gets decided when picking a style for a coding project.

Style 1: Using the ! sign to indicate a not in a conditional

if (!myBool)
{
  //Do Stuff...
}

Style 2: Using == false to indicate a check for falsehood in a conditional

if (myBool == false)
{
  //Do Stuff...
} 

Thanks!

4

3 Answers 3

44

The normal convention is

if (!myBool)

The one place where I don't go this route is with nullable booleans. In that case I will do

if (myBool == true)
{

}

Which is equivalent to

if (myBool.HasValue && myBool.Value)
4
  • 4
    for Nul,able<bool> you can use an extesion method provided by the framework varaible.GetValueOrDefault() aswell
    – Miguel
    Apr 4, 2016 at 17:57
  • 1
    Disagree - For coding readability == true/false is clearer than empty/!
    – N.D.B
    Jun 5, 2017 at 7:21
  • I like this style of nullable bool check, but others want to do: (myBool ?? false) and they say this is the default value to use for null, but i personally think that is harder to read/understand. Though, they came back and said what happens if null ends up == true someday, which is weird since null == null is false anyway. :) May 2, 2018 at 20:29
  • Can you read the ! correctly ALL the time, EVERY time, without the glasses on, in a case like this: "if (!littering) { Litter(); }" => As an ageing dev I prefer "if (littering == false) { Litter(); }"
    – CodeSmile
    Dec 26, 2023 at 17:32
6

I don't know of any language for which the latter is preferred. Use the former.

Warning!

There's a reason for this!

This indeed does what you expect, in most languages:

if (x == false)
    ...

But in e.g. C++, because true is just a synonym for 1 (so 2 isn't true or false), this doesn't work:

if (x != true)
    ...

although it's fine in C#.

In fact, it can also get tricky in .NET -- you can trick a boolean to take an integer value, and mess it up with bitwise arithmetic (e.g. a & b can be false when a is 1 and b is 2, even though both are "true").

In general, just use the former instead of worrying about boolean literals.

3
  • 2
    In languages with type coercion, you would probably want to use ===
    – Sky Kelsey
    Sep 23, 2011 at 23:26
  • .... Provided that you want to rely on type coercion for the specific conditional Sep 23, 2011 at 23:27
  • 3
    @SkyKelsey: Might as well just say "in Javascript" :P.
    – user541686
    Sep 23, 2011 at 23:31
3
if(!myBool)
{
  // Do Stuff here...
}

This is the preferred version, as since you already have a bool variable that contains a true or false, there is no reason to do an additional evaluation in the if statement.


Update

Based on what aquinas has stated, this format is good to use unless you do have a nullable boolean (ex: bool? myBool). If this is the case, use the former:

bool? myBool
if (myBool == false)
{
  // Do stuff here...
}

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