Question

If I have the following booleans

const YESTERDAY = false;
const TODAY = true;
const TOMORROW = false;

What code can I write to make sure exactly one is true?

I've tried this:

$x = self::YESTERDAY ^ self::TODAY ^ self::TOMORROW;

The problem is that with all three constants set to true then $x is true.

Was it helpful?

Solution

$x = ((int) self::YESTERDAY) + ((int) self::TODAY) + ((int) self::TOMORROW); Then if $x === 1; You've got what you need.

EDITED:

Even without type casts (int), it works well, thanks to @DaveRandom, so:

if (self::YESTERDAY + self::TODAY + self::TOMORROW == 1) {}, as for me.

OTHER TIPS

The neatest way I can think of is array_sum():

if (array_sum(array(self::YESTERDAY, self::TODAY, self::TOMORROW)) == 1) {
  // Do something
}

EDIT Actually, all you need to do it replace the ^ with + in your original attempt, and it achieves the same thing:

$x = self::YESTERDAY + self::TODAY + self::TOMORROW;

This turns $x into the number of TRUE values. So for a boolean output use:

$ok = self::YESTERDAY + self::TODAY + self::TOMORROW === 1;

Just as an alternative to devdRew's answer

$x = array_count_values(array((int) self::YESTERDAY,(int) self::TODAY,(int) self::TOMORROW));
if (isset($x[1]) && $x[1] == 1) {
    echo 'Only one TRUE';
}

You can loop over a list of your variables and break when you found a second boolean that is true:

$moreThanOneTrue=false;
$oneTrue;
foreach ($BOOL_VAR_ARRAY as $bool) {
    if ($bool) {
        if($oneTrue) {
            $moreThanOneTrue=true;
            break;
        }
        $oneTrue=true;
    }
}

Like this it's more handy when you have more than three variables.

x will return true if and only if one is true and others are false.

$x = ($a && !($b || $c)) || ($b && !($a || $c)) || ($c && !($a || $b));

May be a bad code, but works.

a ^ b ^ c ^ (a & b & c) is the expresion you look for.

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