87

I have a Rails application and I'm using jQuery to query my search view in the background. There are fields q (search term), start_date, end_date and internal. The internal field is a checkbox and I'm using the is(:checked) method to build the url that is queried:

$.getScript(document.URL + "?q=" + $("#search_q").val() + "&start_date=" + $("#search_start_date").val() + "&end_date=" + $("#search_end_date").val() + "&internal=" + $("#search_internal").is(':checked'));

Now my problem is in params[:internal] because there is a string either containing "true" or "false" and I need to cast it to boolean. Of course I can do it like this:

def to_boolean(str)
     return true if str=="true"
     return false if str=="false"
     return nil
end

But I think there must be a more Ruby'ish way to deal with this problem! Isn't there...?

13 Answers 13

136

As far as i know there is no built in way of casting strings to booleans, but if your strings only consist of 'true' and 'false' you could shorten your method to the following:

def to_boolean(str)
  str == 'true'
end
4
  • 8
    just a little modification str == 'true' || str = '1'
    – AMTourky
    Oct 21, 2013 at 9:46
  • 30
    perhaps str.downcase == 'true' for completeness
    – JEMaddux
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:57
  • @AMTourky shouldn't it be str == 'true' || str == '1' with two "==" ?
    – Pascal
    Dec 18, 2016 at 10:34
  • @Lowryder Yes! if using default check_box.
    – 7urkm3n
    Dec 18, 2016 at 17:05
49

ActiveRecord provides a clean way of doing this.

def is_true?(string)
  ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Column::TRUE_VALUES.include?(string)
end

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Column::TRUE_VALUES has all of the obvious representations of True values as strings.

5
  • 16
    Even simpler, just use ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Column.value_to_boolean(string) (source) apidock.com/rails/v3.0.9/ActiveRecord/ConnectionAdapters/Column/…
    – Mike Atlas
    Feb 6, 2014 at 17:35
  • Yes, in the latest versions! Jul 7, 2014 at 8:25
  • 6
    ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("true") => true ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("T") => true Apr 30, 2015 at 20:07
  • False value list has been moved to ActiveModel::Type::Boolean in Rails 5 Dec 16, 2016 at 13:19
  • ActiveModel::Type::Boolean seems like a much more suitable path - while ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Column::TRUE_VALUES contained "truthy" values, one could argue that it's only incidentally the case, and that values that should be considered truthy for that specific use case but not others could be included. On the other hand, ActiveModel::Type::Boolean is apparently designed to be used in a generic way. Feb 15, 2017 at 17:12
24

Security Notice

Note that this answer in its bare form is only appropriate for the other use case listed below rather than the one in the question. While mostly fixed, there have been numerous YAML related security vulnerabilities which were caused by loading user input as YAML.


A trick I use for converting strings to bools is YAML.load, e.g.:

YAML.load(var) # -> true/false if it's one of the below

YAML bool accepts quite a lot of truthy/falsy strings:

y|Y|yes|Yes|YES|n|N|no|No|NO
|true|True|TRUE|false|False|FALSE
|on|On|ON|off|Off|OFF

Another use case

Assume that you have a piece of config code like this:

config.etc.something = ENV['ETC_SOMETHING']

And in command line:

$ export ETC_SOMETHING=false

Now since ENV vars are strings once inside code, config.etc.something's value would be the string "false" and it would incorrectly evaluate to true. But if you do like this:

config.etc.something = YAML.load(ENV['ETC_SOMETHING'])

it would be all okay. This is compatible with loading configs from .yml files as well.

2
  • 2
    That's good if the passed string is under your control. In this question's case, the provided values come from the user's browser and as such, they should be considered unsafe. YAML allows you to serialize/deserialize any Ruby object and this is potentially dangerous. There have been numerous incidents: google.com/webhp?q=rails+yaml+vulnerability
    – Teoulas
    Aug 19, 2015 at 11:01
  • 1
    @Teoulas, I completely agree with you. In fact, I'm adding a notice so people don't use this in an insecure way. Aug 19, 2015 at 14:49
16

There isn't any built-in way to handle this (although actionpack might have a helper for that). I would advise something like this

def to_boolean(s)
  s and !!s.match(/^(true|t|yes|y|1)$/i)
end

# or (as Pavling pointed out)

def to_boolean(s)
  !!(s =~ /^(true|t|yes|y|1)$/i)
end

What works as well is to use 0 and non-0 instead of false/true literals:

def to_boolean(s)
  !s.to_i.zero?
end
2
  • 3
    you don't need the guard "s and ..." if you use "!!(s =~ /regex_here/)" because "nil =~ /anything/" returns nil.
    – Pavling
    Nov 14, 2011 at 10:25
  • Ah indeed. I added it but kept the old as well, as I think the .match is a little bit easier to read. Nov 14, 2011 at 10:32
8

ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user does this according to Rails' internal mappings ConnectionAdapters::Column::TRUE_VALUES and ConnectionAdapters::Column::FALSE_VALUES:

[3] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("true")
=> true
[4] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("false")
=> false
[5] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("T")
=> true
[6] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("F")
=> false
[7] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("yes")
DEPRECATION WARNING: You attempted to assign a value which is not explicitly `true` or `false` ("yes") to a boolean column. Currently this value casts to `false`. This will change to match Ruby's semantics, and will cast to `true` in Rails 5. If you would like to maintain the current behavior, you should explicitly handle the values you would like cast to `false`. (called from <main> at (pry):7)
=> false
[8] pry(main)> ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user("no")
DEPRECATION WARNING: You attempted to assign a value which is not explicitly `true` or `false` ("no") to a boolean column. Currently this value casts to `false`. This will change to match Ruby's semantics, and will cast to `true` in Rails 5. If you would like to maintain the current behavior, you should explicitly handle the values you would like cast to `false`. (called from <main> at (pry):8)
=> false

So you could make your own to_b (or to_bool or to_boolean) method in an initializer like this:

class String
  def to_b
    ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.type_cast_from_user(self)
  end
end
1
  • 2
    It is ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.cast(value) in Rails 5 (see CWitty below)
    – Dave Burt
    Jan 16, 2017 at 4:39
7

In Rails 5 you can use ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.cast(value) to cast it to a boolean.

1
  • 1
    be aware though, ActiveRecord::Type::Boolean.new.cast("42") returns true Dec 16, 2016 at 13:00
6

You can use wannabe_bool gem. https://github.com/prodis/wannabe_bool

This gem implements a #to_b method for String, Integer, Symbol and NilClass classes.

params[:internal].to_b
5

Perhaps str.to_s.downcase == 'true' for completeness. Then nothing can crash even if str is nil or 0.

3

I don't think anything like that is built-in in Ruby. You can reopen String class and add to_bool method there:

class String
    def to_bool
        return true if self=="true"
        return false if self=="false"
        return nil
    end
end

Then you can use it anywhere in your project, like this: params[:internal].to_bool

1
  • 2
    I definitely wouldn't want to have a to_bool function return nil; that seems wrong. Other conversion functions don't do this: "a".to_i returns 0, not nil
    – Krease
    Jul 8, 2014 at 19:58
2

Looking at the source code of Virtus, I'd maybe do something like this:

def to_boolean(s)
  map = Hash[%w[true yes 1].product([true]) + %w[false no 0].product([false])]
  map[s.to_s.downcase]
end
1

You could consider only appending internal to your url if it is true, then if the checkbox isn't checked and you don't append it params[:internal] would be nil, which evaluates to false in Ruby.

I'm not that familiar with the specific jQuery you're using, but is there a cleaner way to call what you want than manually building a URL string? Have you had a look at $get and $ajax?

1

You could add to the String class to have the method of to_boolean. Then you could do 'true'.to_boolean or '1'.to_boolean

class String
  def to_boolean
    self == 'true' || self == '1'
  end
end
-5

I'm surprised no one posted this simple solution. That is if your strings are going to be "true" or "false".

def to_boolean(str)
    eval(str)
end
4
  • 5
    Thats because This solution is a security Desaster. :D
    – davidb
    Nov 11, 2015 at 18:04
  • 1
    The problem with this solution is user input - if someone types to_boolean("ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute('DROP TABLE *')") , it'll destroy your database (and return true!). Have fun :D
    – Ben Aubin
    Dec 11, 2015 at 20:56
  • Good points. I wasn't thinking of the context. I was thinking the least amount of characters to implement. :)
    – povess
    Jan 2, 2016 at 18:24
  • An easy fix for said vulnerability: bool = nil; bool = eval(str) if ["true", "false"].include?(str) Just thought I should add for the sake of clarifications. Jul 19, 2020 at 23:53

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