Boolean elements
Whether creating equations in Boolean algebra or using them in your programs, you’ll form both simple and complex logical expressions that use basic operations to combine the logical conditions.
Notation
Boolean (logical) equations are expressed in a way similar to mathmatical equations. Variables in Boolean expressions though, have only two possible values, true
or false
. For an equation using a logical expression, the equivalant sides of the equal sign ,=
, will be only true
or false
too.
The following list shows the basic notation elements for Boolean expressions.
~A
: the inverse (NOT) ofA
, whenA
istrue
,~A
isfalse
A + B
: the value ofA
ORB
A · B
: the value ofA
ANDB
A ⊕ B
: the value of the exclusive OR (XOR) ofA
withB
Q
: equivalent result (OUTPUT) value of a logical expression
A resulting value, Q
, from a logical expression in is shown like:
Q
= A + B
An equation to show logically equivalent expressions (where both sides have the same resulting value) can look like this:
~(A + B)
= ~A · ~B
Logical operators
All Boolean expressions result from a combination of conditions and operators. These operators join individual conditons together and evaluate into a single true
or false
condition. The following are the basic logical operators. Their use in both Boolean algebra and in code is shown along with their truth table.
Identity
Identity means that a result value is the same as the condition itself.
Q = A
let A = false
let Q = A
Example - Blink LEDs on press
let A = false
basic.forever(function () {
A = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.A)
if (A) {
basic.showIcon(IconNames.Chessboard)
} else {
basic.clearScreen()
}
basic.pause(100)
})
Truth table
A | A |
---|---|
F | F |
T | T |
NOT (Negation)
The NOT operator is called negation or the inverse. It takes a single logical value and makes it have the opposite value, true
goes to false
and false
goes to true
.
Q = ~A
let A = false
let Q = !(A)
Example - Blink LEDs on not pressed
let A = false
basic.forever(function () {
A = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.A)
if (!(A)) {
basic.showIcon(IconNames.Chessboard)
} else {
basic.clearScreen()
}
basic.pause(100)
})
Truth table
A | ~A |
---|---|
F | T |
T | F |
OR (Disjunction)
The OR operator results in true
when one or more conditions are true
.
Q = A + B
let A = false
let B = false
let Q = A || B
Example - Blink on any press
let A = false
let B = false
basic.forever(function () {
A = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.A)
B = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.B)
if (A || B) {
basic.showIcon(IconNames.Chessboard)
} else {
basic.clearScreen()
}
basic.pause(100)
})
Truth table
A | B | A + B |
---|---|---|
F | F | F |
T | F | T |
F | T | T |
T | T | T |
AND (Conjunction)
The AND operator requires that all conditions are true
for the result to be true
.
Q = A · B
let A = false
let B = false
let Q = A && B
Example - Blink on double press only
let A = false
let B = false
basic.forever(function () {
A = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.A)
B = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.B)
if (A && B) {
basic.showIcon(IconNames.Chessboard)
} else {
basic.clearScreen()
}
basic.pause(100)
})
Truth table
A | B | A · B |
---|---|---|
F | F | F |
T | F | F |
F | T | F |
T | T | T |
XOR (Exclusive OR)
Exclusive OR (XOR) means that only one or the other condition is true. Both conditions can’t be true at the same time. XOR is common in Boolean algebra but it has no operator in JavaScript. Its operation can be made from combining a few simple expressions.
Q = A ⊕ B
let A = false
let B = false
let Q = (A || B) && !(A && B)
Example - Blink on one press or the other
let A = false
let B = false
basic.forever(function () {
A = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.A)
B = input.buttonIsPressed(Button.B)
if ((A || B) && !(A && B)) {
basic.showIcon(IconNames.Chessboard)
} else {
basic.clearScreen()
}
basic.pause(100)
})
Truth table
A | B | A ⊕ B |
---|---|---|
F | F | F |
T | F | T |
F | T | T |
T | T | F |