Boolean: Difference between revisions
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By convention we can express true as the integer 1 and false as the integer 0 (zero). Please be careful as some programming languages treat an empty or unset value as FALSE. | By convention we can express true as the integer 1 and false as the integer 0 (zero). Please be careful as some programming languages treat an empty or unset value as FALSE. | ||
Please know it is '''very common''' to use booleans to test for a condition. If something is TRUE then select the true option, if something is FALSE, then select the false option. | |||
== Example == | == Example == |
Revision as of 06:01, 5 August 2017
In most computer programming languages, a Boolean data type is a data type with only two possible values: true or false.[2]
By convention we can express true as the integer 1 and false as the integer 0 (zero). Please be careful as some programming languages treat an empty or unset value as FALSE.
Please know it is very common to use booleans to test for a condition. If something is TRUE then select the true option, if something is FALSE, then select the false option.
Example[edit]
In PHP:
<?php
$myFirstVar = True; // assign the value TRUE to $myFirstVar
$myOtherVar = False; // assign the value FALSE to $myOtherVar
?>
In Python:
myFirstVar = True
myOtherVar = False
In Javascript:
var myFirstVar = true;
var myOtherVar = false;
Do you understand this?[edit]
Standards[edit]
- Define the terms: variable, constant, operator, object.