Boolean
The Boolean
object is an object wrapper for a boolean value.
The value passed as the first parameter is converted to a boolean value, if necessary. If value is
omitted or is 0, -0, null, false, NaN
, undefined, or the empty string (""), the object has an
initial value of false. All other values, including any object or the string "false"
, create an
object with an initial value of true.
Do not confuse the primitive Boolean values true and false with the true and false values of the Boolean object.
Any object whose value is not undefined
or null
, including a Boolean object whose value is false,
evaluates to true when passed to a conditional statement. For example, the condition in the following
if statement evaluates to true:
x = new Boolean(false);
if (x) {
// . . . this code is executed
}
This behavior does not apply to Boolean primitives. For example, the condition in the following if
statement evaluates to false
:
x = false;
if (x) {
// . . . this code is not executed
}
Do not use a Boolean
object to convert a non-boolean value to a boolean value. Instead, use Boolean
as a function to perform this task:
x = Boolean(expression); // preferred
x = new Boolean(expression); // don't use
If you specify any object, including a Boolean object whose value is false, as the initial value of a Boolean object, the new Boolean object has a value of true.
myFalse = new Boolean(false); // initial value of false
g = new Boolean(myFalse); // initial value of true
myString = new String("Hello"); // string object
s = new Boolean(myString); // initial value of true
Do not use a Boolean object in place of a Boolean primitive.
Creating Boolean objects with an initial value of false
bNoParam = new Boolean();
bZero = new Boolean(0);
bNull = new Boolean(null);
bEmptyString = new Boolean("");
bfalse = new Boolean(false);
Creating Boolean objects with an initial value of true
btrue = new Boolean(true);
btrueString = new Boolean("true");
bfalseString = new Boolean("false");
bSuLin = new Boolean("Su Lin");
Methods
Returns a string of either "true" or "false" depending upon the value of the object.
Overrides the Object.prototype.toString
method.
The Boolean object overrides the toString
method of the Object
object; it does not inherit
Object.toString
. For Boolean objects, the toString
method returns a string representation of
the object.
JavaScript calls the toString
method automatically when a Boolean is to be represented as a text
value or when a Boolean is referred to in a string concatenation.
For Boolean objects and values, the built-in toString
method returns the string "true"
or
"false"
depending on the value of the boolean object. In the following code, flag.toString
returns "true"
.
var flag = new Boolean(true)
var myVar = flag.toString()
Returns
- String
The boolean value represented as a string.
Returns the primitive value of the Boolean
object. Overrides the Object.prototype.valueOf
method.
The valueOf
method of Boolean returns the primitive value of a Boolean object or literal Boolean
as a Boolean data type.
This method is usually called internally by JavaScript and not explicitly in code.
x = new Boolean();
myVar = x.valueOf() //assigns false to myVar
Returns
- Boolean
The primitive value.