Is there a really easy way to toggle a boolean value in javascript?
So far, the best I've got outside of writing a custom function is the ternary:
bool = bool ? false : true;
bool = !bool;
This holds true in most languages.
If you don't mind the boolean being converted to a number (that is either 0 or 1), you can use the Bitwise XOR Assignment Operator. Like so:
bool ^= true; //- toggle value.
let inDynamicEditMode = true; // Value is: true (boolean)
inDynamicEditMode ^= true; // Value is: 0 (number)
inDynamicEditMode ^= true; // Value is: 1 (number)
inDynamicEditMode ^= true; // Value is: 0 (number)
This is easier for me to scan than repeating the variable in each line.
This method works in all (major) browsers (and most programming languages).
bool ^= 1
bool === false
or bool === true
anymore. It might break existing code, so be careful.
bool = bool != true;
One of the cases.
Let's see this in action:
var b = true; console.log(b); // true b = !b; console.log(b); // false b = !b; console.log(b); // true
Anyways, there is no shorter way than what you currently have.
I was searching after a toggling method that does the same, but which "toggles" an initial value of null
or undefined
to false
.
Here it is:
booly = !(booly != false)
bool === tool ? bool : tool
if you want the value to hold true if tool
(another boolean) has the same value
In a case where you may be storing true / false as strings, such as in localStorage where the protocol flipped to multi object storage in 2009 & then flipped back to string only in 2011 - you can use JSON.parse to interpret to boolean on the fly:
this.sidebar = !JSON.parse(this.sidebar);
sidebar = (sidebar == trueValue) falseValue : trueValue;
I always liked Boolean value, but nowadays I'm using binary for both convenience and debugging. You can use de consept !key : ++key: --key
to toggle, and if you are in any asynchronous function or anytime an error or false true occurs, the value will leak out of 0(zero)/ 1(one) and you can trigger an alert to debug later.
Success story sharing
bool = !bool || true;
to have a default, I suppose.