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JavaScript Booleans
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JavaScript Booleans

The Boolean Data Type

In JavaScript, a Boolean is a primitive data type that can only have one of two values:

true or false

The Boolean value of an expression is the basis for all JavaScript comparisons and conditions.

Key Boolean Characteristics

  • true and false are boolean data types
  • true and false are the only possible boolean values
  • true and false must be written in lowercase
  • true and false must be written without quotes

Boolean Use Cases

Very often, in programming, you will need a data type that can represent one of two values, like:

  • yes or no
  • on or off
  • true or false

Boolean values are fundamental for logical operations and control flow in JavaScript programming.


Comparisons

All JavaScript comparison operators (like ==, !=, <, >) return true or false from the comparison.

Given that x = 5, the table below explains comparison:

Description Example Returns
Equal to (x == 8) false
Not equal to (x != 8) true
Greater than (x > 8) false
Less than (x < 8) true

Example

let x = 5;

(x == 8); // equals false
(x != 8); // equals true
Try it Yourself »

Conditions

Booleans are extensively used in if statements to determine the code blocks to execute based on the logic.

Example Result
if (day == "Monday") true or false
if (salary > 9000) true or false
if (age < 18) true or false

Example

if (hour < 18) {
  greeting = "Good day";
} else {
  greeting = "Good evening";
}
Try it Yourself »

Loops

Booleans are extensively used in loops to determine conditions for looping.

Description Example
For loop for (i = 0; i < 5; i++)
While loop while (i < 10)
For in loop for (x in person)
For of loop for (x of cars)

Example

while (i < 10) {
  text += i;
  i++;
}
Try it Yourself »

See Also:

JavaScript Loops


The Boolean() Function

You can use the Boolean() function to find out if an expression (or a variable) is true:

Example

Boolean(10 > 9)
Try it Yourself »

Or even easier:

Example

(10 > 9)
Try it Yourself »


Everything With a "Value" is True

Examples

100 is true

3.14 is true

-15 is true

true is true

"Hello" is true

"false" is true

(7 + 1 + 3.14) is true
Try it Yourself »

Everything Without a "Value" is False

Examples

0 is false

"" is false

undefined is false

null is false

NaN is false

false is false

The Boolean value of 0 (zero) is false:

let x = 0;
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of -0 (minus zero) is false:

let x = -0;
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of "" (empty string) is false:

let x = "";
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of undefined is false:

let x;
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of null is false:

let x = null;
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of false is (you guessed it) false:

let x = false;
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

The Boolean value of NaN is false:

let x = 10 / "Hallo";
Boolean(x);
Try it Yourself »

JavaScript Booleans as Objects

Normally JavaScript booleans are primitive values created from literals:

let x = false;

But booleans can also be defined as objects with the keyword new:

let y = new Boolean(false);

Example

let x = false;
let y = new Boolean(false);

// typeof x returns boolean
// typeof y returns object
Try it yourself »

Warning

Do not create Boolean objects.

The new keyword complicates the code and slows down execution speed.

Boolean objects can produce unexpected results:

Booleans and boolean objects cannot be safely compared:

let x = Boolean(false);
let y = new Boolean(false);

(x == y) returns true
(x === y) returns false
Try it Yourself »

Comparing two JavaScript objects always returns false.

Complete Boolean Reference

For a complete reference, go to our Complete JavaScript Boolean Reference.

The reference contains descriptions and examples of all Boolean properties and methods.



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