To check if a value is of boolean type, check if the value is equal to false or equal to true , e.g. if (variable === true || variable === false) . Boolean values can only be true and false , so if either condition is met, the value has a type of boolean. Copied!
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.
ToString() Method in C# The Boolean. ToString() method in C# converts the value of this instance to its equivalent string representation (either "True" or "False").
To convert Boolean to String in Java, use the toString() method. For this, firstly, we have declared two booleans. String str1 = new Boolean(bool1). toString(); String str2 = new Boolean(bool2).
Only people from Microsoft can really answer that question. However, I'd like to offer some fun facts about it ;)
First, this is what it says in MSDN about the Boolean.ToString() method:
Return Value
Type: System.String
TrueString if the value of this instance is true, or FalseString if the value of this instance is false.
Remarks
This method returns the constants "True" or "False". Note that XML is case-sensitive, and that the XML specification recognizes "true" and "false" as the valid set of Boolean values. If the String object returned by the ToString() method is to be written to an XML file, its String.ToLower method should be called first to convert it to lowercase.
Here comes the fun fact #1: it doesn't return TrueString or FalseString at all. It uses hardcoded literals "True" and "False". Wouldn't do you any good if it used the fields, because they're marked as readonly, so there's no changing them.
The alternative method, Boolean.ToString(IFormatProvider) is even funnier:
Remarks
The provider parameter is reserved. It does not participate in the execution of this method. This means that the Boolean.ToString(IFormatProvider) method, unlike most methods with a provider parameter, does not reflect culture-specific settings.
What's the solution? Depends on what exactly you're trying to do. Whatever it is, I bet it will require a hack ;)
...because the .NET environment is designed to support many languages.
System.Boolean (in mscorlib.dll) is designed to be used internally by languages to support a boolean datatype. C# uses all lowercase for its keywords, hence 'bool', 'true', and 'false'.
VB.NET however uses standard casing: hence 'Boolean', 'True', and 'False'.
Since the languages have to work together, you couldn't have true.ToString() (C#) giving a different result to True.ToString() (VB.NET). The CLR designers picked the standard CLR casing notation for the ToString() result.
The string representation of the boolean true is defined to be Boolean.TrueString.
(There's a similar case with System.String: C# presents it as the 'string' type).
For Xml you can use XmlConvert.ToString method.
It's simple code to convert that to all lower case.
Not so simple to convert "true" back to "True", however.
true.ToString().ToLower()
is what I use for xml output.
How is it not compatible with C#? Boolean.Parse and Boolean.TryParse is case insensitive and the parsing is done by comparing the value to Boolean.TrueString or Boolean.FalseString which are "True" and "False".
EDIT: When looking at the Boolean.ToString method in reflector it turns out that the strings are hard coded so the ToString method is as follows:
public override string ToString()
{
if (!this)
{
return "False";
}
return "True";
}
I know the reason why it is the way it is has already been addressed, but when it comes to "custom" boolean formatting, I've got two extension methods that I can't live without anymore :-)
public static class BoolExtensions
{
public static string ToString(this bool? v, string trueString, string falseString, string nullString="Undefined") {
return v == null ? nullString : v.Value ? trueString : falseString;
}
public static string ToString(this bool v, string trueString, string falseString) {
return ToString(v, trueString, falseString, null);
}
}
Usage is trivial. The following converts various bool values to their Portuguese representations:
string verdadeiro = true.ToString("verdadeiro", "falso");
string falso = false.ToString("verdadeiro", "falso");
bool? v = null;
string nulo = v.ToString("verdadeiro", "falso", "nulo");
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With