51

At least three times today I've seen questions about the following kind of if statement:

if (var != "x" || var != "y" || var != "z")

The most recent is Why is my if statement activating when it is not supposed to?. I've seen it in C, JavaScript, PHP, Python, and other languages.

This is one of the most common errors people make in writing if statements. The answer is simply to change || to &&. So there are thousands of duplicates. But when I was trying to find one so I could mark that question as a duplicate, I couldn't; phrases like "if statement" are just too common. I'll bet there's already a really good answer out there, does anyone have a link to one that could serve as the canonical answer?

Actually, the answer posted in the above question explains the issue pretty well. So if no one has a better one to suggest, I'll probably start using that.

There are similar issues with:

if (var == "x" || "y" || "z")

and

if (var != "x" || "y" || "z")

There are some languages where this actually works, but in most of the common languages it doesn't do what the programmer intends. Again, if someone has a canonical question for these, please share it.

10
  • 12
    The question you linked seems unsuitable as a good reference, and should probably be closed as "simple typographical error". I assume this will apply to all other such questions as well, since someone who is able to distill their problem down to a minimal example should in the process of doing so solve it themselves.
    – HugoRune
    Oct 11, 2014 at 7:15
  • What are the advantages of closing such questions as duplicates instead of 'too localized because of typo'? Do these questions serve a purpose for future visitors? I'd think most of them get scrubbed.
    – HugoRune
    Oct 11, 2014 at 7:20
  • 5
    The Python dupe for the latter mistake is How do I test one variable against multiple values? I don't see the former nearly as much in Python.
    – Martijn Pieters Mod
    Oct 11, 2014 at 7:57
  • 12
    The very fact that the same problem keeps showing up suggests it is not "too localized". Oct 11, 2014 at 8:39
  • Concerning the latter problem: C# & Java. The first problem (&& vs ||) should be closed as a typo. The latter already has language-specific solutions, they just aren't connected yet. Oct 11, 2014 at 10:34
  • 12
    What really pisses me off about such questions is that the poster does not consider breaking up the expression into smaller ones with intermediate booleans, (in order to find out which fails). Debugging 101 - 'spit up the problem area into several smaller ones'. Oct 11, 2014 at 13:55
  • 7
    Is this a question a professional or enthusiast programmer would ask?
    – ntoskrnl
    Oct 11, 2014 at 15:55
  • 1
    @ntoskrnl Not very likely, but we don't actually have a flag for that anymore.
    – Boaz
    Oct 11, 2014 at 19:39
  • 14
    @HugoRune I don't consider this a typo, it's a basic misunderstanding of how boolean logic works. Newbie programmers try to translate logical expressions from English to PHP/JS/C, but they don't translate directly. They also need to be educated about de Morgan's Law.
    – Barmar
    Oct 12, 2014 at 5:06
  • It seems to come up more often in a while or do/while loop, than it does in an if statement. For example (shamelessly plugging my own answer), there's stackoverflow.com/q/22397105 and many others like it. Oct 13, 2014 at 8:40

3 Answers 3

31

I'm currently maintaining a list of javascript questions that deal with the if (var == "x" || "y" || "z") problem:

[129] 13-08-21 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18347033/how-to-shorten-my-conditional-statements
[1]   12-02-02 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9121395/javascript-the-prettiest-way-to-compare-one-value-against-multiple-values
[12]  11-08-18 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4728144/check-variable-equality-against-a-list-of-values
[9]   12-12-19 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13944216/javascript-if-statement-with-multiple-permissible-conditions |>http://stackoverflow.com/a/13944262/1048572
[0]   12-12-19 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/13959064/javascript-comparing-single-value-against-multiple-values-with-or-operands |>http://stackoverflow.com/a/13959224/1048572
[1]   13-02-25 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15066671/optimize-or-in-if
[13]  13-03-11 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15343484/checking-a-variable-value-using-an-or-operator |> http://stackoverflow.com/a/15343556/1048572
[2]   13-10-09 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1561257/combining-multiple-conditions-into-one-in-javascript
[2]   11-04-08 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5599957/conditional-if-for-many-values-better-way
[3]   11-10-28 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7931118/shorter-way-to-check-multiple-or-conditions
[0]   13-05-25 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16751883/concise-way-to-compare-multiple-element-values-in-javascript-jquery
[0]   12-08-06 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11836081/javascript-if-statement-used-to-check-file-extensions-not-working
[2]   12-10-05 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12743248/how-to-nest-or-statements-in-javascript
[3]   13-01-08 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14218565/javascript-formatting-for-if-condition
[0]   13-09-02 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18566394/how-do-i-say-if-value-is-not-equal-to-a-b-or-c
[2]   12-10-08 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12778196/javascript-if-variable-variable2-variable3
[0]   12-08-27 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12146629/eliminating-multiple-or-conditions-in-javascript
[0]   13-04-11 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15950685/javascript-if-statement
[3]   14-01-29 http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21441876/jquery-is-there-a-faster-way-of-writing-or-operator-in-javascript

I have not yet found a good, canonical, thorough, catch-all answer which explains all ways of solving this in JS, including pros&cons for each (where is it applicable, how fast is it, what browser support does it have, how easy to understand, how concise, …)

I'm planning to write one as soon as I find time though, so that we could close them all.

5
  • 8
    The upvote count seems to say that I should take the time to write that canonical post…
    – Bergi
    Oct 13, 2014 at 23:59
  • Are none of these questions really duplicates of each other? Nor of sampathsris' language-agnostic attempt? Feb 7, 2023 at 0:51
  • @KarlKnechtel They're not duplicates of sampathsris' canonical, which is about the var != "x" || var != "y" || var != "z" problem. The var == "x" || "y" || "z" problem is a different one. And I still have neither written a new canonical nor decided upon choosing an existing one - but my private list has grown a bit since (until I stopped some years ago)
    – Bergi
    Feb 7, 2023 at 2:12
  • Oh, I got confused because OP was asking about two different situations. Feb 7, 2023 at 2:25
  • @KarlKnechtel It took me a minute or two as well after coming back to this thread and looking at the other answer :-)
    – Bergi
    Feb 7, 2023 at 2:27
19

I don't think there can be a language agnostic answer to this question, because some languages allow expressing the concept [item not in a list or set] more precisely.

For instance, I've always thought that one of Pascals advantages over C was its set handling. In more modern languages, many of them have collections classes, which has a Contains method. In SQL, you'd use NOT IN as the answer.

How to handle this definitely depends upon the language.

6
  • Good point - every language have its own canonical way of expression "item (doesn't) belong to set". Oct 12, 2014 at 3:57
  • Even if there's a way to specify "value not in set", if it's just 2-3 hard-coded values it's often just as good to spell it out with a few comparisons. And it's educational for them to understand how boolean logic works.
    – Barmar
    Oct 12, 2014 at 5:02
  • @Barmar: a sequence of ANDs or ORs is not going to be considered "educational" for SQL.
    – jmoreno
    Oct 12, 2014 at 5:10
  • @jmoreno Good point, I wouldn't use this in SQL. But in PHP, I wouldn't write !in_array($answer, array('y', 'n')), it's too convoluted compared to $answer != 'y' && $answer != 'y'
    – Barmar
    Oct 12, 2014 at 5:22
  • @Barmar: !in_array($answer, ['y','n']) is cleaner, but I probably wouldn't use it, unless it was a common idiom in that code. But really, that's my point. You can have a canonical answer for A language at a specific point in time, but not for all languages or even a given language for all time. The array('y','n') version is less acceptable because it is wordy, [] is more acceptable because its not as long. If php added a method to arrays so that it was ['y','n']::contains($answer), I might revisit my opinion, even though it is longer than the is_array version using [].
    – jmoreno
    Oct 12, 2014 at 6:03
  • We could have a canonical answer that explains the correct logic of the original expression, and also has list of language-specific shorthand forms and idioms. I guess that's not truly "language-agnostic", but my main point was to try to get it all in one place, since there's so much in common across the languages.
    – Barmar
    Oct 12, 2014 at 6:21
9

I have just (attempted to) create a canonical question/answer pair for the likes of this question: Why non-equality check of one variable against many values always returns true?

The answer is community wiki, but I'm not sure how to make the question a community wiki. If the question suits as a canonical example, please feel free to edit and improve.

2
  • 1
    I like it. I've bookmarked it and started editing it -- I added a section listing language-specific shortcuts, as I suggested in a comment on @jmoreno's answer.
    – Barmar
    Oct 13, 2014 at 17:15
  • FWIW, I suggest you move the meta-commentary to the comments.
    – Veedrac
    Oct 13, 2014 at 22:58

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .