2b - Javascript:Control Statements II - Logical operators
The logical operators are generally used with Boolean
values and, when they are, they return a Boolean value. However, both &&
and || actually return the value of one of their operands,
so if the relevent operand is not a Boolean value, the operator may return a
non-Boolean value.
&& This is the logical AND
operator, which returns a Boolean true if both the operands are true. Logically
it follows that if the first operand is false, then the whole expression is
false, and this is how the operator works; It first evaluates the left hand
operand, and if this returns false then, without going any further, it returns
false for the whole expression. Otherwise it returns the value of the second
operand: true or false for a Boolean value, or the actual value itself if non-Boolean.
Assuming 'a' to be 3, 'b' to be 5, and 'c' to be 3, the following examples all
return true:
if((a == c) && (b == 5))
x = "bread" && (c == 3)
...while the following return 'cheese':
x = (b > c) && "cheese"
x = "bread" && "cheese"
|| This is the logical OR operator and it returns a value of true if one or both of the operands is true. It works by first evaluating the left-hand operand and, if this is true, disregarding the right-hand one and returning true for the whole expression. If, however, the left-hand operand is false, then it returns the value of the right-hand operand: true or false if Boolean, or else the value itself. These next examples both return true:
if((a == c) || (b == 9))
x = (a > b) || (c == 3)
...while this one returns 'cheese':
x = (a > b) || "cheese"
If, however, the first operand is not a Boolean value, the OR operator returns the value of the first operand whether the second is true or not; in the next example 'bread':
x = "bread" || (c == 3)
! This is the logical NOT operator (also called logical negation) which returns false if its single operand can be converted to true, or if it is a non-Boolean value:
x = !(a == c)
x = !"cheese"
...and true if its operand can be converted to false:
x = !(a > b)