Logical operations: Difference between revisions

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{{task|Basic Data Operations}}
{{task|Basic Data Operations}} {{basic data operation}} [[Category:Simple]]
{{basic data operation}}Write a function that takes two logical (boolean) values, and outputs the result of "and" and "or" on both arguments as well as "not" on the first arguments. If the programming language doesn't provide a separate type for logical values, use the type most commonly used for that purpose.
Write a function that takes two logical (boolean) values, and outputs the result of "and" and "or" on both arguments as well as "not" on the first arguments.
If the programming language doesn't provide a separate type for logical values, use the type most commonly used for that purpose.


If the language supports additional logical operations on booleans such as XOR, list them as well.
If the language supports additional logical operations on booleans such as XOR, list them as well.
Line 14: Line 15:


I have also included logical xor because it is defined for Ada boolean types.
I have also included logical xor because it is defined for Ada boolean types.
All the operators below work equally well on arrays of boolean types. In fact, a packed array of boolean is an array of bits, providing a direct link between logical and bitwise operations.
All the operators below work equally well on arrays of boolean types.
In fact, a packed array of boolean is an array of bits,
providing a direct link between logical and bitwise operations.


<lang ada>procedure Print_Logic(A : Boolean; B : Boolean) is
<lang ada>procedure Print_Logic(A : Boolean; B : Boolean) is
Line 132: Line 135:
PRINT " NOT " a% " = " NOT a%
PRINT " NOT " a% " = " NOT a%
ENDPROC</lang>
ENDPROC</lang>
{{out}}
Output:
<pre>
<pre>
0 AND 0 = 0 0 OR 0 = 0 0 EOR 0 = 0 NOT 0 = -1
0 AND 0 = 0 0 OR 0 = 0 0 EOR 0 = 0 NOT 0 = -1
Line 141: Line 144:


=={{header|bc}}==
=={{header|bc}}==
POSIX bc has neither Boolean values nor built-in logical operations. Thus one has to write them oneself:
POSIX bc has neither Boolean values nor built-in logical operations.
Thus one has to write them oneself:
<lang bc>/* The following three functions assume 0 is false and 1 is true */
<lang bc>/* The following three functions assume 0 is false and 1 is true */


Line 210: Line 214:
& out$(Logic$(~,~))
& out$(Logic$(~,~))
);</lang>
);</lang>
{{out}}
Output:
<pre>(x,y)=(,):
<pre>(x,y)=(,):
x and y -> true
x and y -> true
Line 429: Line 433:
end.</lang>
end.</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>a = TRUE
<pre>a = TRUE
b = FALSE
b = FALSE
Line 471: Line 475:
Print('a XOR b: ');
Print('a XOR b: ');
PrintLn(a XOR b);</lang>
PrintLn(a XOR b);</lang>
{{out}}
Output:<pre>a = True
<pre>a = True
b = False
b = False
a AND b: False
a AND b: False
Line 688: Line 693:
logical(false, true)</lang>
logical(false, true)</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>a AND b = true && true = true
<pre>a AND b = true && true = true
a OR b = true || true = true
a OR b = true || true = true
Line 835: Line 840:
end</lang>
end</lang>


Partial Sample Output<pre>...
{{out|Partial Sample Output:}}
<pre>...
bnot( "\x03" ) = "\xfc"
bnot( "\x03" ) = "\xfc"
...
...
Line 1,003: Line 1,009:
logical(1,0)</lang>
logical(1,0)</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>
<pre>
and(1,0)=0 or(1,0)=1 not(1)=0
and(1,0)=0 or(1,0)=1 not(1)=0
Line 1,018: Line 1,024:
f(false,false);
f(false,false);
</lang>
</lang>
{{out}}
Output:
<pre> true, true, false
<pre> true, true, false
false, true, false
false, true, false
Line 1,155: Line 1,161:
return
return
</lang>
</lang>
{{out}}
'''Output:'''
<pre>
<pre>
true AND true = true
true AND true = true
Line 1,276: Line 1,282:
VIEW-AS ALERT-BOX.</lang>
VIEW-AS ALERT-BOX.</lang>


{{out}}
Output

<pre>---------------------------
<pre>---------------------------
Message (Press HELP to view stack trace)
Message (Press HELP to view stack trace)
Line 1,392: Line 1,397:


logic(3,10);</lang>
logic(3,10);</lang>
{{out}}
Output:
<lang>3 && 10 is 10
<pre>3 && 10 is 10
3 || 10 is 3
3 || 10 is 3
3 ^^ 10 is
3 ^^ 10 is
Line 1,412: Line 1,417:
3 or 10 is 3
3 or 10 is 3
3 xor 10 is
3 xor 10 is
not 3 is 0</lang>
not 3 is 0</pre>


=={{header|PHP}}==
=={{header|PHP}}==
Line 1,557: Line 1,562:
}</lang>
}</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>rascal>logic(false, false);

<lang rascal>rascal>logic(false, false);


a and b, is false
a and b, is false
Line 1,566: Line 1,570:
a implies b, is true
a implies b, is true
not a, true
not a, true
ok</lang>
ok</pre>


=={{header|REBOL}}==
=={{header|REBOL}}==
Line 1,780: Line 1,784:
].</lang>
].</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>True/\True = True

<lang slate>True/\True = True
True/\False = False
True/\False = False
False/\True = False
False/\True = False
Line 1,791: Line 1,794:
False\/False = False
False\/False = False
True not = False
True not = False
False not = True</lang>
False not = True</pre>


=={{header|Smalltalk}}==
=={{header|Smalltalk}}==
Line 1,914: Line 1,917:
]</lang>
]</lang>


{{out}}
Output:
<pre>
<pre>
00000000 00000000 FFFFFFFF 00000000
00000000 00000000 FFFFFFFF 00000000

Revision as of 14:04, 26 October 2014

Task
Logical operations
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.

Basic Data Operation
This is a basic data operation. It represents a fundamental action on a basic data type.

You may see other such operations in the Basic Data Operations category, or:

Integer Operations
Arithmetic | Comparison

Boolean Operations
Bitwise | Logical

String Operations
Concatenation | Interpolation | Comparison | Matching

Memory Operations
Pointers & references | Addresses

Write a function that takes two logical (boolean) values, and outputs the result of "and" and "or" on both arguments as well as "not" on the first arguments. If the programming language doesn't provide a separate type for logical values, use the type most commonly used for that purpose.

If the language supports additional logical operations on booleans such as XOR, list them as well.

ACL2

<lang lisp>(defun logical-ops (a b)

  (progn$ (cw "(and a b) = ~x0~%" (and a b))
          (cw "(or a b)  = ~x0~%" (or a b))
          (cw "(not a) =   ~x0~%" (not a))))</lang>

Ada

I have also included logical xor because it is defined for Ada boolean types. All the operators below work equally well on arrays of boolean types. In fact, a packed array of boolean is an array of bits, providing a direct link between logical and bitwise operations.

<lang ada>procedure Print_Logic(A : Boolean; B : Boolean) is begin

  Put_Line("A and B is " & Boolean'Image(A and B));
  Put_Line("A or B  is " & Boolean'Image(A or B));
  Put_Line("A xor B is " & Boolean'Image(A xor B));
  Put_Line("not A   is " & Boolean'Image(not A));

end Print_Logic;</lang>

Agda

<lang agda>module AndOrNot where

open import Data.Bool open import Data.Product

test : Bool → Bool → Bool × Bool × Bool test x y = x ∧ y , x ∨ y , not x</lang>

e.g.

test true false ⇒ false , true , false

Aikido

<lang aikido> function logic(a,b) {

 println("a AND b: " + (a && b))
 println("a OR b: " + (a || b))
 println("NOT a: " + (!a))

} </lang>

Aime

<lang aime>void out(integer a, integer b) {

   o_integer(a && b);
   o_byte('\n');
   o_integer(a || b);
   o_byte('\n');
   o_integer(!a);
   o_byte('\n');

}</lang>

ALGOL 68

<lang algol68>PROC print_logic = (BOOL a, b)VOID: (

  1. for a 6-7 bit/byte compiler #
 printf(($"a and b is "gl$, a AND b);
 printf(($"a or b is "gl$, a OR b);
 printf(($"not a is "gl$, NOT a);
 printf(($"a equivalent to b is "gl$, a EQ b);
 printf(($"a not equivalent to b is "gl$, a NE b);
  1. Alternatively ASCII #
 printf(($"a and b is "gl$, a & b); 
 printf(($"a and b is "gl$, a /\ b);  
 printf(($"a or b is "gl$, a \/ b);
 printf(($"a equivalent to b "gl$, a = b);
 printf(($"a not equivalent to b "gl$, a /= b);

¢ for a European 8 bit/byte charcter set eg. ALCOR or GOST ¢

 printf(($"a and b is "gl$, a ∧ b);
 printf(($"a or b is "gl$, a ∨ b);
 printf(($"not a is "gl$, ¬ a)
 printf(($"a not equivalent to b is "gl$, a ≠ b)

)</lang>

AutoHotkey

<lang AutoHotkey>a = 1 b = 0 msgbox % "a and b is " . (a && b) msgbox % "a or b is " . (a || b) msgbox % "not a is " . (!a)</lang>

AWK

<lang awk>$ awk '{print "and:"($1&&$2),"or:"($1||$2),"not:"!$1}' 0 0 and:0 or:0 not:1 0 1 and:0 or:1 not:1 1 0 and:0 or:1 not:0 1 1 and:1 or:1 not:0</lang>

BASIC

Works with: QuickBasic version 4.5

<lang qbasic>SUB logic (a%, b%) 'no booleans in BASIC...these are integers. 1 for true 0 for false.

 PRINT a AND b
 PRINT a OR b
 PRINT NOT a

END SUB</lang>

BASIC256

<lang BASIC256>a = true b = false print a and b print a or b print a xor b print not a</lang>

BBC BASIC

<lang bbcbasic> PROClogic(FALSE, FALSE)

     PROClogic(FALSE, TRUE)
     PROClogic(TRUE, FALSE)
     PROClogic(TRUE, TRUE)
     END
     
     DEF PROClogic(a%, b%)
     LOCAL @% : @% = 2 : REM Column width
     PRINT a% " AND " b% " = " a% AND b% TAB(20);
     PRINT a% " OR "  b% " = " a% OR b%  TAB(40);
     PRINT a% " EOR " b% " = " a% EOR b% TAB(60);
     PRINT " NOT " a% " = " NOT a%
     ENDPROC</lang>
Output:
 0 AND  0 =  0       0 OR  0 =  0        0 EOR  0 =  0       NOT  0 = -1
 0 AND -1 =  0       0 OR -1 = -1        0 EOR -1 = -1       NOT  0 = -1
-1 AND  0 =  0      -1 OR  0 = -1       -1 EOR  0 = -1       NOT -1 =  0
-1 AND -1 = -1      -1 OR -1 = -1       -1 EOR -1 =  0       NOT -1 =  0

bc

POSIX bc has neither Boolean values nor built-in logical operations. Thus one has to write them oneself: <lang bc>/* The following three functions assume 0 is false and 1 is true */

/* And */ define a(x, y) {

   return(x * y)

}

/* Or */ define o(x, y) {

   return(x + y - x * y)

}

/* Not */ define n(x) {

   return(1 - x)

}

define f(a, b) {

   "a and b: "
   a(a, b)
   "a or b: "
   o(a, b)
   "not a: "
   n(a)

}</lang>

Works with: GNU bc

GNU bc's extensions make this task much easier: <lang bc>define logic_test(a, b) {

   print "a and b: ", a && b, "\n"
   print "a or b: ", a || b, "\n"
   print "not a: ", !a, "\n"

}</lang>

Bracmat

Bracmat has no boolean values. Instead, each expression has, apart from its value, also a S/F/I (SUCCEEDED/FAILED/IGNORE) feature, where the latter is used in the exceptional case that the success or failure of an expression should not influence the program flow.

The expression ~ is special in that it always fails. Most expressions only fail in exceptional cases, such as when a file cannot be opened. Match expressions stand apart from the rest and can be compared to expressions with comparison operations in other languages.

In the example below, the empty string represents 'true' and ~ represents 'false'. The binary operators & and |, which normally are used as the glue between expressions such as match operations, function definitions and function calls, are used as the logical operators 'and' and 'or', respectively.

<lang bracmat>( ( Logic

 =   x y
   .   '$arg:(=?x,?y)
     &   str
       $ ( "\n(x,y)="
           !arg
           ( ":\n"
             "x and y -> "
             ( (!x&!y)&true
             | false
             )
           )
           ( \n
             "x or y -> "
             ( (!x|!y)&true
             | false
             )
           )
           "\nnot x -> "
           (~!x&true|false)
         )
 )

& out$(Logic$(,)) & out$(Logic$(~,)) & out$(Logic$(,~)) & out$(Logic$(~,~)) );</lang>

Output:
(x,y)=(,):
x and y -> true
x or y -> true
not x -> false

(x,y)=(~,):
x and y -> false
x or y -> true
not x -> true

(x,y)=(,~):
x and y -> false
x or y -> true
not x -> false

(x,y)=(~,~):
x and y -> false
x or y -> false
not x -> true

Brat

<lang brat>logic = { a, b |

 p "a and b: #{ a && b }"
 p "a or b: #{ a || b }"
 p "not a: #{ not a }"

}</lang>

C

<lang c>void print_logic(int a, int b) {

 printf("a and b is %d\n", a && b);
 printf("a or b is %d\n", a || b);
 printf("not a is %d\n", !a);

}</lang>

C++

<lang cpp>void print_logic(bool a, bool b) {

 std::cout << std::boolalpha; // so that bools are written as "true" and "false"
 std::cout << "a and b is " << (a && b) << "\n";
 std::cout << "a or b is " << (a || b) << "\n";
 std::cout << "not a is " << (!a) << "\n";

}</lang>

C#

<lang csharp>using System;

namespace LogicalOperations {

   class Program
   {
       static void Main(string[] args)
       {
           bool a = true, b = false;
           Console.WriteLine("a and b is {0}", a && b);
           Console.WriteLine("a or b is {0}", a || b);
           Console.WriteLine("Not a is {0}", !a);
           Console.WriteLine("a exclusive-or b is {0}", a ^ b);
       }
   }

}</lang>


Clipper

<lang clipper> Function Foo( a, b )

  // a and b was defined as .F. (false) or .T. (true)
  ? a .AND. b
  ? a .OR. b
  ? .NOT. a, .NOT. b
  Return Nil

</lang>

Clojure

<lang clojure> (defn logical [a b]

 (prn (str "a and b is " (and a b)))
 (prn (str "a or b is " (or a b)))
 (prn (str "not a is "  (not a))))

(logical true false) </lang>

COBOL

Logical operations in COBOL are exactly the same as bitwise operations. <lang cobol> IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.

      PROGRAM-ID. print-logic.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      01  result                  PIC 1 USAGE BIT.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      01  a                       PIC 1 USAGE BIT.
      01  b                       PIC 1 USAGE BIT.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING a, b.
          COMPUTE result = a B-AND b
          DISPLAY "a and b is " result
          COMPUTE result = a B-OR b
          DISPLAY "a or b is " result
          COMPUTE result = B-NOT a
          DISPLAY "Not a is " result
          COMPUTE result = a B-XOR b
          DISPLAY "a exclusive-or b is " result
          GOBACK
          .</lang>

ColdFusion

<lang cfm><cffunction name = "logic" hint = "Performs basic logical operations">

 <cfargument name = "a" required = "yes" type = "boolean" />
 <cfargument name = "a" required = "yes" type = "boolean" />
 <cfoutput>
   'A' AND 'B' is #a AND b#< br />
   'A' OR  'B' is #a OR  b#< br />
   NOT 'A'     is #!a#
 </cfoutput>

</cffunction></lang>

Common Lisp

<lang lisp>(defun logic (a b)

 (print "a and b is") (write (and a b))
 (print "a or b is" ) (write (or a b))
 (print "not a is"  ) (write (not a)))</lang>

D

<lang d>import std.stdio;

void logic(T, U)(T lhs, U rhs) {

   writefln("'%s' is of type '%s', '%s' is of type '%s';", 
            lhs, typeid(typeof(lhs)), rhs,typeid(typeof(rhs)));
   writefln("\t'%s' AND '%s' is %s, ", lhs, rhs, lhs && rhs);
   writefln("\t'%s' OR '%s' is %s, ", lhs, rhs, lhs || rhs);
   writefln("\tNOT '%s' is %s.\n", lhs, !lhs);

}

class C { int value; }

void main() {

   bool theTruth = true;
   bool theLie = false;
   real zeroReal = 0.0L;
   real NaN; // D initializes floating point values to NaN
   int zeroInt  = 0;
   real[] nullArr = null;
   string emptyStr = "";
   string nullStr = null;
   C someC = new C;
   C nullC = null;
   // Note: Struct is value type in D, but composite
   //  so no default bool equivalent.
   logic(theTruth, theLie); 
   logic(zeroReal, NaN);  
   logic(zeroInt, nullArr); 
   logic(nullStr, emptyStr);  
   logic(someC, nullC);  

}</lang>

Output:
'true' is of type 'bool', 'false' is of type 'bool';
    'true' AND 'false' is false, 
    'true' OR 'false' is true, 
    NOT 'true' is false.

'0' is of type 'real', 'nan' is of type 'real';
    '0' AND 'nan' is false, 
    '0' OR 'nan' is true, 
    NOT '0' is true.

'0' is of type 'int', '[]' is of type 'real[]';
    '0' AND '[]' is false, 
    '0' OR '[]' is false, 
    NOT '0' is true.

'' is of type 'immutable(char)[]', '' is of type 'immutable(char)[]';
    '' AND '' is false, 
    '' OR '' is true, 
    NOT '' is true.

'logical_operations.C' is of type 'logical_operations.C', 'null' is of type 'logical_operations.C';
    'logical_operations.C' AND 'null' is false, 
    'logical_operations.C' OR 'null' is true, 
    NOT 'logical_operations.C' is false.

Delphi

<lang Delphi>program LogicalOperations;

{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}

const

 a = True;
 b = False;

begin

 Write('a = ');
 Writeln(a);
 Write('b = ');
 Writeln(b);
 Writeln;
 Write('a AND b: ');
 Writeln(a AND b);
 Write('a OR b: ');
 Writeln(a OR b);
 Write('NOT a: ');
 Writeln(NOT a);
 Write('a XOR b: ');
 Writeln(a XOR b);

end.</lang>

Output:
a = TRUE
b = FALSE

a AND b: FALSE
a OR b: TRUE
NOT a: FALSE
a XOR b: TRUE

Déjà Vu

<lang dejavu>showbool a b:

   !.( a b or a b and a b xor a b not a )

for a in [ false true ]:

   for b in [ false true ]:
       showbool a b</lang>
Output:
true true true true false false
true false true false true false
false true true false true true
false false false false false true

DWScript

<lang Delphi>var a := True; var b := False;

Print('a = '); PrintLn(a); Print('b = '); PrintLn(b);

Print('a AND b: '); PrintLn(a AND b);

Print('a OR b: '); PrintLn(a OR b);

Print('NOT a: '); PrintLn(NOT a);

Print('a XOR b: '); PrintLn(a XOR b);</lang>

Output:
a = True
b = False
a AND b: False
a OR b: True
NOT a: False
a XOR b: True

E

<lang e>def logicalOperations(a :boolean, b :boolean) {

   return ["and" => a & b,
           "or"  => a | b,
           "not" => !a,
           "xor" => a ^ b]

}</lang>

Each of these is a method on boolean objects; the above is precisely equivalent to:

<lang e>def logicalOperations(a :boolean, b :boolean) {

   return ["and" => a.and(b),
           "or"  => a.or(b),
           "not" => a.not(),
           "xor" => a.xor(b)]

}</lang>

If the :boolean guards were removed, these operations would also work on other types, such as sets (& is union and | is intersection; not is not supported).

ECL

<lang ECL> LogicalOperations(BOOLEAN A,BOOLEAN B) := FUNCTION

 ANDit := A AND B;
 ORit  := A OR B;
 NOTA  := NOT A;
 XORit := (A OR B) AND NOT (A AND B);
 DS    := DATASET([{A,B,'A AND B is:',ANDit},
                   {A,B,'A OR B is:',ORit},
                   {A,B,'NOT A is:',NOTA},
                   {A,B,'A XOR B is:',XORit}],
                   {BOOLEAN AVal,BOOLEAN BVal,STRING11 valuetype,BOOLEAN val});
 RETURN DS;

END;

LogicalOperations(FALSE,FALSE); LogicalOperations(FALSE,TRUE); LogicalOperations(TRUE,FALSE); LogicalOperations(TRUE,TRUE); LogicalOperations(1>2,1=1); //Boolean expressions are also valid here </lang>

Efene

<lang efene>compare_bool = fn (A, B) {

   io.format("~p and ~p = ~p~n", [A, B, A and B])
   io.format("~p or ~p = ~p~n", [A, B, A or B])
   io.format("not ~p = ~p~n", [A, not A])
   io.format("~p xor ~p = ~p~n", [A, B, A xor B])
   io.format("~n")

}

@public run = fn () {

   compare_bool(true, true)
   compare_bool(true, false)
   compare_bool(false, true)
   compare_bool(false, false)

} </lang>

Erlang

<lang Erlang>1> true and false. false 2> false or true. true 3> true xor false. true 4> not false. true 5> not (true and true). false</lang>

Euphoria

<lang euphoria>procedure print_logic(integer a, integer b)

   printf(1,"a and b is %d\n", a and b)
   printf(1,"a or b is %d\n", a or b)
   printf(1,"a xor b is %d\n", a xor b)
   printf(1,"not a is %d\n", not a)

end procedure</lang>

F#

<lang fsharp>let printLogic a b =

   printfn "a and b is %b" (a && b)
   printfn "a or b is %b" (a || b)
   printfn "Not a is %b" (not a)
   // The not-equals operator has the same effect as XOR on booleans.
   printfn "a exclusive-or b is %b" (a <> b)</lang>

Factor

<lang factor>: logical-operators ( a b -- )

   {
       [ "xor is: " write xor . ]
       [ "and is: " write and . ]
       [ "or is:  " write or . ]
       [ "not is: " write drop not . ]
   } 2cleave ;</lang>

FALSE

FALSE uses zero/non-zero for testing False and True. Comparison operators return -1 for True and 0 for False, which work with bitwise operators for logical operations. <lang false>1 3=~["unequal, "]? 1 1= 1_=["true is -1, "]? 0~["false is 0, "]? 'm$'a>'z@>&["a < m < z"]?</lang>

Fantom

<lang fantom> class Main {

 static Void doOps (Bool arg1, Bool arg2)
 {
   echo ("$arg1 and $arg2 = ${arg1.and(arg2)}")
   echo ("$arg1 or $arg2 = ${arg1.or(arg2)}")
   echo ("not $arg1 = ${arg1.not}")
   echo ("$arg1 xor $arg2 = ${arg1.xor(arg2)}")
 }
 public static Void main ()
 {
   [true,false].each |Bool arg1|
   {
     [true,false].each |Bool arg2|
     {
       doOps (arg1, arg2)
     }
   }
 }

} </lang>

Forth

Forth can use bitwise operators if the boolean values are well formed: TRUE (-1) and FALSE (0). 0<> converts an ill-formed flag (zero/non-zero) to a well-formed flag (false/true). <lang forth>: .bool ( ? -- ) if ." true" else ." false" then ;

logic ( a b -- ) 0<> swap 0<> swap
cr ." a = " over .bool ."   b = " dup .bool
cr ." a and b = " 2dup and .bool
cr ." a  or b = " over  or .bool
cr ." not a = " 0= .bool ;</lang>

Fortran

In ANSI FORTRAN 66 or later, use LOGICAL data type: <lang fortran> SUBROUTINE PRNLOG(A, B)

      LOGICAL A, B
      PRINT *, 'a and b is ', A .AND. B
      PRINT *, 'a or b is ', A .OR. B
      PRINT *, 'not a is ', .NOT. A
      

C You did not ask, but the following logical operators are also standard C since ANSI FORTRAN 66 C =======================================================================

C This yields the same results as .EQ., but has lower operator precedence C and only works with LOGICAL operands:

      PRINT *, 'a equivalent to b is ', A .EQV. B
      

C This yields the same results as .NE., but has lower operator precedence C and only works with LOGICAL operands (this operation is also commonly C called "exclusive or"):

      PRINT *, 'a not equivalent to b is ', A .NEQV. B
      END</lang>

GAP

<lang gap>Logical := function(a, b)

   return [ a or b, a and b, not a ];

end;

Logical(true, true);

  1. [ true, true, false ]

Logical(true, false);

  1. [ true, false, false ]

Logical(false, true);

  1. [ true, false, true ]

Logical(false, false);

  1. [ false, false, true ]</lang>

gecho

<lang gecho>3 4 and</lang> 3&&4 <lang gecho>1 2 or</lang> 1||2

Go

<lang go>func printLogic(a, b bool) {

   fmt.Println("a and b is", a && b)
   fmt.Println("a or b is", a || b)
   fmt.Println("not a is", !a)

}</lang> Other operators that work on type bool are == and !=. == corresponds to the logical operation of equivalence.  != corresponds to exclusive or.

Groovy

<lang groovy>def logical = { a, b ->

   println """

a AND b = ${a} && ${b} = ${a & b} a OR b = ${a} || ${b} = ${a | b} NOT a = ! ${a} = ${! a} a XOR b = ${a} != ${b} = ${a != b} a EQV b = ${a} == ${b} = ${a == b} """ }</lang>

Program: <lang groovy>logical(true, true) logical(true, false) logical(false, false) logical(false, true)</lang>

Output:
a AND b   = true && true   = true
a OR b    = true || true   = true
NOT a     = ! true         = false
a XOR b   = true != true   = false
a EQV b   = true == true   = true


a AND b   = true && false   = false
a OR b    = true || false   = true
NOT a     = ! true         = false
a XOR b   = true != false   = true
a EQV b   = true == false   = false


a AND b   = false && false   = false
a OR b    = false || false   = false
NOT a     = ! false         = true
a XOR b   = false != false   = false
a EQV b   = false == false   = true


a AND b   = false && true   = false
a OR b    = false || true   = true
NOT a     = ! false         = true
a XOR b   = false != true   = true
a EQV b   = false == true   = false

Harbour

<lang visualfoxpro>PROCEDURE Foo( a, b )

  // a and b was defined as .F. (false) or .T. (true)
  ? a .AND. b
  ? a .OR. b
  ? ! a, ! b
  RETURN</lang>

Haskell

Instead of a function and printing, which is unidiomatic for Haskell, here are the operations in the same style as in Bitwise operations:

<lang haskell>a = False b = True

a_and_b = a && b a_or_b = a || b not_a = not a</lang>

HicEst

No logical variables. Nonzero is true, zero is false in logical expressions: <lang hicest> x = value1 /= 0

 y     = value2 /= 0
 NOTx  = x == 0
 xANDy = x * y
 xORy  = x + y  /= 0
 EOR   = x /= y </lang>

Io

<lang io>printLogic := method(a,b,

 writeln("a and b is ", a and b)
 writeln("a or b is ", a or b)
 writeln("not a is ", a not) 

)</lang>

Icon and Unicon

Icon/Unicon do not have a native logical or Boolean type; nor do they use Boolean values for flow control. Instead for flow control they use the concept of success (a result is returned) or failure (a signal). For more on this see see Short Circuit Evaluation. Because there is almost no need for Boolean values the concept is somewhat alien.

One likely situation where Boolean values could be encountered is working with an external array of bits/flags. This example attempts to show a solution that would work in such a scenario. Some characteristics would include:

  • the ability to work with an entire array of bits
  • the ability to test an individual bit for true/false
  • need to be careful with automatic type conversions

Of course other characteristics and functionality might be desirable, examples include:

  • shifting (based on ishift)
  • rotation
  • conversion to a (large) integer
  • setting a specific bit in the array

Those are left as an exercise for the reader.

There are a couple of choices for implementation. Briefly:

  • use of &null and a non-null - this creates problems for negation as not &null can be any or all values
  • use of large integers as bit arrays - only signed integers are supported and this complicates preserving array length
  • use of strings - a bit wasteful of space

This implementation uses strings as packed arrays of bits. This facilitates easy reading and writing from external sources. While string length is variable it is controlled and doesn't change under negation. The built-in integer bit operations (ior, ixor, iand, ishift) can be utilized under the covers. <lang Icon>invocable all

procedure main() #: sample demonstrating boolean function use

limit := 4 char2 := char(2)||char(0) every (i := char(1 to limit)|char2) do {

  write(iop := "bnot","( ",image(i)," ) = ",image(iop(i)))
  every k := 3 | 10 do {
    write("bistrue(",image(i),",",k,") - ", if bistrue(i,k) then "returns" else "fails")
    write("bisfalse(",image(i),",",k,") - ", if bisfalse(i,k) then "returns" else "fails")
    }
  every (j := char(1 to limit)) & (iop := "bor"|"band"|"bxor") do 
     write(iop,"( ",image(i),", ",image(j)," ) = ",image(iop(i,j)))
  }

end


procedure bisfalse(b,p) #: test if bit p (numbered right to left from 1) is false; return b or fails return boolean_testbit(0,b,p) end

procedure bistrue(b,p) #: test if bit p is true; return b or fails return boolean_testbit(1,b,p) end

procedure bnot(b) #: logical compliment of b (not is a reserved word) static cs,sc initial sc := reverse(cs := string(&cset)) if type(b) ~== "string" then runerr(103,b) return map(b,cs,sc) # en-mass inversion through remapping ordered cset end

procedure bor(b1,b2) #: logical or return boolean_op(ior,b1,b2) end

procedure band(b1,b2) #: logical or return boolean_op(iand,b1,b2) end

procedure bxor(b1,b2) #: logical or return boolean_op(ixor,b1,b2) end

procedure boolean_testbit(v,b,p) #: (internal) test if bit p is true/false; return b or fail if not 0 <= integer(p) = p then runerr(101,p) if type(b) ~== "string" then runerr(103,b) if v = ishift(ord(b[-p/8-1]), -(p%8)+1) then return b end

procedure boolean_op(iop,b1,b2) #: boolean helper local b3,i static z initial z := char(0) if type(b1) ~== "string" then runerr(103,b1) if type(b2) ~== "string" then runerr(103,b2) b3 := "" every i := -1 to -max(*b1,*b2) by -1 do

  b3 :=  char(iop(ord(b1[i]|z),ord(b2[i]|z))) || b3

return b3 end</lang>

Partial Sample Output
:
...
bnot( "\x03" ) = "\xfc"
...
bor( "\x03", "\x01" ) = "\x03"
band( "\x03", "\x01" ) = "\x01"
bxor( "\x03", "\x01" ) = "\x02"
...
bnot( "\x02\x00" ) = "\xfd\xff"
bistrue("\x02\x00",3) - fails
bisfalse("\x02\x00",3) - returns
bistrue("\x02\x00",10) - returns
bisfalse("\x02\x00",10) - fails
bor( "\x02\x00", "\x01" ) = "\x02\x01"
band( "\x02\x00", "\x01" ) = "\x00\x00"
bxor( "\x02\x00", "\x01" ) = "\x02\x01"
...

J

J uses 0 for logical false and 1 for logical true. <lang j> aon=: *.`+.`(-.@[)`:0</lang> Given boolean arguments, *. is logical and, +. is logical or, and -.is logical not.

Additional primary logical operators include *: (not-and), +: (not-or), ~: (exclusive-or) and <: (logical implication).

<lang j>

  a=: 0 0 1 1   NB. Work on vectors to show all possible
  b=: 0 1 0 1   NB. 2-bit combos at once.
  a aon b

0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0</lang>

Java

<lang java>public static void logic(boolean a, boolean b){

 System.out.println("a AND b: " + (a && b));
 System.out.println("a OR b: " + (a || b));
 System.out.println("NOT a: " + (!a));

}</lang>

Additionally, ^ is used for XOR and == is used for "equal to" (a.k.a. bidirectional implication).

JavaScript

<lang javascript>function logic(a,b) {

 print("a AND b: " + (a && b));
 print("a OR b: " + (a || b));
 print("NOT a: " + (!a));

}</lang>

jq

In jq, and and or have short-circuit semantics, and can be used with non-boolean arguments.

In addition to the basic logical operators, jq has any and all filters. Versions of jq since 1.4 also have extended versions of these for working efficiently with streams. <lang jq>def logic(a; b):

 "\(a) and \(b) => \(a and b)",
 "\(a) or \(b)  => \(a or  b)",
 "\(a) | not    => \(a | not)",
 "if \(a) then true else false end => \(if a then true else false end)" ;</lang>

Example: <lang jq> (false, null, []) as $a | (false, null, {}) as $b | logic( $a; $b )</lang>

<lang sh>$ jq -n -r -f logical_operations.jq false and false => false false or false => false false | not => true if false then true else false end => false false and null => false false or null => false false | not => true if false then true else false end => false false and {} => false false or {} => true false | not => true if false then true else false end => false null and false => false null or false => false null | not => true if null then true else false end => false null and null => false null or null => false null | not => true if null then true else false end => false null and {} => false null or {} => true null | not => true if null then true else false end => false [] and false => false [] or false => true [] | not => false if [] then true else false end => true [] and null => false [] or null => true [] | not => false if [] then true else false end => true [] and {} => true [] or {} => true [] | not => false

if [] then true else false end => true</lang>

Lasso

<lang Lasso>// br is just for formatting output here define br => '\r'

// define vars local(a = true, b = false)

// boolean comparators. // note, not including comparison operators which would return boolean results 'a AND b: ' + (#a && #b) br 'a OR b: ' + (#a || #b) br 'NOT a: ' + !#a br 'NOT a (using not): ' + not #a</lang>

Liberty BASIC

There is no truly Boolean type. 0 = false, nonzero = true. A true value is ANY value not zero, but is usually considered to be either "1" or "-1". <lang lb> False =0 True =not( False)

print " True ="; True, "False ="; False, "NB True here shown as -1" print

print " a b AND OR XOR" a =0: b =0: print " "; a; " "; b; " "; a and b; " "; a or b; " "; a xor b a =0: b =1: print " "; a; " "; b; " "; a and b; " "; a or b; " "; a xor b a =1: b =0: print " "; a; " "; b; " "; a and b; " "; a or b; " "; a xor b a =1: b =1: print " "; a; " "; b; " "; a and b; " "; a or b; " "; a xor b

end </lang>

True =-1     False =0      NB True here shown as -1
.
a   b    AND  OR   XOR
0   0     0    0    0
0   1     0    1    1
1   0     0    1    1
1   1     1    1    0


The boolean literals are used as words ("true and "false) when used in a program. <lang logo>to logic :a :b

 (print [a AND b =] and :a :b)
 (print [a OR b =] or :a :b)
 (print [NOT a =] not :a)

end</lang>

AND and OR may have arity greater than two if used in parentheses (and :a :b :c).

Lua

<lang lua> function logic(a,b)

 return a and b, a or b, not a

end </lang>

M4

<lang m4>define(`logical',

  `and($1,$2)=eval($1&&$2)  or($1,$2)=eval($1||$2)  not($1)=eval(!$1)')

logical(1,0)</lang>

Output:
and(1,0)=0  or(1,0)=1  not(1)=0

Maple

Infix and prefix operators are provided for each of and, or, not as well as xor and implies. <lang Maple> f:=proc(a,b) a and b, a or b, not a; end proc:

f(true,true); f(true,false); f(false,true); f(false,false); </lang>

Output:
                              true, true, false
                             false, true, false
                              false, true, true
                             false, false, true

Mathematica

<lang Mathematica>And[a,b,...] Or[a,b,...] Not[a]</lang> And can also be given using the infix operator &&, Or can also be used using the infix operator ||. Not[a] can also be written as !a. Furthermore Mathematica supports: <lang Mathematica>Xor[a, b,...] Nand[a, b,...] Nor[a, b,...] Xnor[a, b,...]</lang> Note that the functions are not restricted to 2 arguments; any number of arguments are allowed (except for the function Not). All these functions can also be used with infix operators, the characters for that are: \[Xor], \[Nand], \[Nor], and \[Xnor]. Or by typing [escape] [name boolean operator] [escape].

Maxima

<lang maxima>f(a, b) := [not a, a or b, a and b];

/* to use multiple arguments, use any of these */ a and b and c and d; a or b or c or d; "and"(a, b, c, d); "or"(a, b, c, d); apply("and", [a, b, c, d]); apply("or", [a, b, c, d]);</lang>

MAXScript

<lang maxscript>fn printLogic a b = (

   format "a and b is %\n" (a and b)
   format "a or b is %\n" (a or b)
   format "not a is %\n" (not a)

)</lang>

Metafont

<lang metafont>def tf(expr a) = if a: "true" else: "false" fi enddef; def test(expr a, b) =

 for o = "and", "or":
   message tf(a) & " " & o & " " & tf(b);
   show a scantokens(o) b;
 endfor
 message "not " & tf(a);
 show not a enddef;</lang>

<lang metafont>test(true, true); test(false, false); test(true, false); test(false, true); end</lang>

Modula-3

<lang modula3>MODULE Logical EXPORTS Main;

FROM IO IMPORT Put; FROM Fmt IMPORT Bool;

PROCEDURE Test(a, b: BOOLEAN) =

 BEGIN
   Put("a AND b is " & Bool(a AND b) & "\n");
   Put("a OR b is " & Bool(a OR b) & "\n");
   Put("NOT a is " & Bool(NOT a) & "\n");
 END Test;

BEGIN

 Test(TRUE, FALSE);

END Logical.</lang>

MUMPS

<lang MUMPS> LOGIC(A,B)

WRITE !,A," AND ",B," IS ",A&B
WRITE !,A," OR  ",B," IS ",A!B
WRITE !,"NOT ",A," AND ",B," IS ",'(A)&B
WRITE !,"NOT ",A," OR ",B," IS ",'(A)!B

</lang>

Nemerle

<lang Nemerle>using System; using System.Console;

module Logical {

   WriteLogical(a : bool, b : bool) : void
   {
       WriteLine("{0} and {1} is {2}", a, b, a && b);
       WriteLine("{0} or {1} is {2}", a, b, a || b);
       WriteLine("not {0} is {1}", a, !a);
   }
   
   Main() : void {WriteLogical(true, false)}

}</lang> Or, if you prefer keywords to operators import the Nemerle.English namespace to use and, or, and not.

NetRexx

<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */ options replace format comments java crossref symbols binary

runSample(arg) return

-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ method logicalOperation(xL = boolean, xR = boolean) public static

 say showBool(xL) 'AND' showBool(xR) '=' showBool(xL &  xR) -- AND
 say showBool(xL) 'OR ' showBool(xR) '=' showBool(xL |  xR) -- OR
 say showBool(xL) 'XOR' showBool(xR) '=' showBool(xL && xR) -- XOR
 say '     '      'NOT' showBool(xL) '=' showBool(\xL)      -- NOT
 say
 return

-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ method showBool(bb = boolean) public static

 if bb then bt = 'true '
 else       bt = 'false'
 return bt

-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ method runSample(arg) private static

 TRUE_  = (1 == 1)
 FALSE_ = \TRUE_ 
 lpairs = [ -
   [TRUE_,  TRUE_ ], -
   [TRUE_,  FALSE_], -
   [FALSE_, TRUE_ ], -
   [FALSE_, FALSE_]  -
 ]
 loop lx = 0 to lpairs.length - 1
   lpair = lpairs[lx]
   --say showBool(lpair[0]) showBool(lpair[1])
   logicalOperation(lpair[0], lpair[1])
   end lx
 return

</lang>

Output:
true  AND true  = true 
true  OR  true  = true 
true  XOR true  = false
      NOT true  = false

true  AND false = false
true  OR  false = true 
true  XOR false = true 
      NOT true  = false

false AND true  = false
false OR  true  = true 
false XOR true  = true 
      NOT false = true 

false AND false = false
false OR  false = false
false XOR false = false
      NOT false = true

NewLISP

<lang newlisp> (define (logic a b) (print "a and b is: " (and a b) "\n a or b is: " (or a b)) (print "\n not a is: " (not a)))

</lang>

Nimrod

<lang nimrod>proc logic(a, b) =

 echo "a and b: ", a and b
 echo "a or b: ", a or b
 echo "not a: ", not a
 echo "a xor b: ", a xor b</lang>

Objeck

<lang objeck> bundle Default {

 class Logic {
   function : Main(args : String[]) ~ Nil {
     a := true;
     b := false;
     IO.Console->GetInstance()->Print("a and b is: ")->PrintLine(a & b);
     IO.Console->GetInstance()->Print("a or b is: ")->PrintLine(a | b);
     IO.Console->GetInstance()->Print("not a is: ")->PrintLine(a <> true);
   }
 }

} </lang>

OCaml

<lang ocaml>let print_logic a b =

 Printf.printf "a and b is %B\n" (a && b);
 Printf.printf "a or b is %B\n" (a || b);
 Printf.printf "not a is %B\n" (not a)</lang>

Octave

<lang octave>function test(a, b)

 s1 = num2str(a);
 s2 = num2str(b);
 disp(strcat(s1, " and ", s2, " = ", num2str(a&&b)));
 disp(strcat(s1, " or ", s2, " = ", num2str(a||b)));
 disp(strcat("not ", s1, " = ", num2str(!a)));

endfunction

% constant true is 1, false is 0 test(true, true); test(false, false); test(true, false); test(false, true);</lang>

OOC

Bools in ooc are just covers for C's bools and respond to the same operators. <lang ooc> logic: func (a: Bool, b: Bool) {

 println()
 "A=#{a}, B=#{b}:"  println()
 "AND:   #{a && b}" println()
 "OR:    #{a || b}" println()
 "NOT A: #{!a}"     println()

}

main: func {

 logic(true, false)
 logic(true, true)
 logic(false, false)
 logic(false, true)

} </lang>

OpenEdge/Progress

The logical data type can have three values: true, false or unknown (represented by question mark).

<lang progress>FUNCTION testLogical RETURNS CHAR (

  i_l1 AS LOGICAL,
  i_l2 AS LOGICAL

):

  RETURN 
     SUBSTITUTE( '&1 and &2:  &3', i_l1, i_l2, i_l1 AND i_l2 ) + '~n' +
     SUBSTITUTE( '&1 or &2:  &3', i_l1, i_l2, i_l1 OR i_l2 )  + '~n' +
     SUBSTITUTE( 'not &1:  &2', i_l1, NOT i_l1 )
     .

END FUNCTION.</lang> <lang progress>MESSAGE

  testLogical( FALSE, FALSE ) SKIP(1)
  testLogical( FALSE, TRUE ) SKIP(1)
  testLogical( TRUE, FALSE ) SKIP(1)
  testLogical( TRUE, TRUE ) SKIP(2)
  testLogical( ?, ? ) SKIP(1)
  testLogical( ?, FALSE ) SKIP(1)
  testLogical( ?, TRUE ) SKIP(1)

VIEW-AS ALERT-BOX.</lang>

Output:
---------------------------
Message (Press HELP to view stack trace)
---------------------------
no and no:  no
no or no:  no
not no:  yes 

no and yes:  no
no or yes:  yes
not no:  yes 

yes and no:  no
yes or no:  yes
not yes:  no 

yes and yes:  yes
yes or yes:  yes
not yes:  no 


? and ?:  ?
? or ?:  ?
not ?:  ? 

? and no:  no
? or no:  ?
not ?:  ? 

? and yes:  ?
? or yes:  yes
not ?:  ? 

---------------------------
OK   Help   
---------------------------

Oz

<lang oz>proc {PrintLogic A B}

  %% using not short-circuiting standard library functions
  {Show {And A B}}
  {Show {Or A B}}
  {Show {Not A}}
  %% using short-circuiting keywords
  {Show A andthen B}
  {Show A orelse B}

end</lang>

PARI/GP

Note that the forms bitand(), bitor(), bitneg(), and bitxor() also exist. These apply the operator to each bit and do not short-circuit, unlike the below. <lang parigp>logic(a,b)={

 print(a&b); \\ && is the same
 print(a|b); \\ || is the same
 print(!a);

};</lang>

Pascal

<lang pascal>procedure printlogic(a, b: boolean);

begin
 writeln('a and b is ', a and b);
 writeln('a or b is ', a or b);
 writeln('not a is', not a);
end;</lang>

Perl

<lang perl>sub show_bool {

       return shift() ? 'true' : 'false', "\n";

}

sub test_logic {

       my ($a, $b) = @_;
       print "a and b is ", show_bool $a && $b;
       print "a or b is ", show_bool $a || $b;
       print "not a is ", show_bool !$a;
       print "a xor b is ", show_bool($a xor $b);

}</lang>

There are also and, or, and not operators. These are just like &&, ||, and ! (respectively) except for their precedences, which are much lower.

Perl 6

Perl 6 has an abundance of logical operators for various purposes. <lang perl6>sub logic($a,$b) {

   say "$a && $b is ", $a && $b;     # short-circuiting
   say "$a || $b is ", $a || $b;     # short-circuiting
   say "$a ^^ $b is ", $a ^^ $b;
   say "!$a is ",     !$a;
   say "$a ?& $b is ", $a ?& $b;     # non-short-circuiting
   say "$a ?| $b is ", $a ?| $b;     # non-short-circuiting
   say "$a ?^ $b is ", $a ?^ $b;     # non-short-circuiting
   say "$a +& $b is ", $a +& $b;     # numeric bitwise
   say "$a +| $b is ", $a +| $b;     # numeric bitwise
   say "$a +^ $b is ", $a +^ $b;     # numeric bitwise
   say "$a ~& $b is ", $a ~& $b;     # buffer bitwise
   say "$a ~| $b is ", $a ~| $b;     # buffer bitwise
   say "$a ~^ $b is ", $a ~| $b;     # buffer bitwise
   say "$a & $b is ", $a & $b;       # junctional/autothreading
   say "$a | $b is ", $a | $b;       # junctional/autothreading
   say "$a ^ $b is ", $a ^ $b;       # junctional/autothreading
   say "$a and $b is ", ($a and $b); # loose short-circuiting
   say "$a or $b is ",  ($a or $b);  # loose short-circuiting
   say "$a xor $b is ", ($a xor $b);
   say "not $a is ",    (not $a);

}

logic(3,10);</lang>

Output:
3 && 10 is 10
3 || 10 is 3
3 ^^ 10 is 
!3 is 0
3 ?& 10 is 1
3 ?| 10 is 1
3 ?^ 10 is 0
3 +& 10 is 2
3 +| 10 is 11
3 +^ 10 is 9
3 ~& 10 is 1
3 ~| 10 is 30
3 ~^ 10 is 30
3 & 10 is all(3, 10)
3 | 10 is any(3, 10)
3 ^ 10 is one(3, 10)
3 and 10 is 10
3 or 10 is 3
3 xor 10 is 
not 3 is 0

PHP

<lang php>function print_logic($a, $b) {

   echo "a and b is ", $a && $b ? 'True' : 'False', "\n";
   echo "a or b is ", $a || $b ? 'True' : 'False', "\n";
   echo "not a is ", ! $a ? 'True' : 'False', "\n";

}</lang>

PicoLisp

<lang PicoLisp>(de logic (A B)

  (prin "A AND B is ")
  (println (and A B))
  (prin "A OR B is ")
  (println (or A B))
  (prin "A XOR B is ")
  (println (xor A B))
  (prin "NOT A is ")
  (println (not A)) )</lang>

PL/I

<lang pli>logical_ops: procedure (t, u);

  declare (t, u) bit (1);
  put skip list (t & u);
  put skip list (t | u); /* logical or   */
  put skip list (^t);    /* logical not  */
  put skip list (t ^ u); /* exclusive or */

end logical_ops;</lang>

Pop11

<lang pop11>define print_logic(a, b);

   printf(a and b, 'a and b is %p\n');
   printf(a or b, 'a or b is %p\n');
   printf(not(a), 'not a is %p\n');

enddefine;</lang>

Example usage is: <lang pop11>print_logic(true, false);</lang>

PostScript

<lang postscript> /logical{ /a exch def /b exch def a b and = a b or = a not = }def </lang>

PowerShell

<lang powershell>function Test-Boolean ([bool] $a, [bool] $b) {

   Write-Host "A and B:   " ($a -and $b)
   Write-Host "A or B:    " ($a -or $b)
   Write-Host "not A:     " (-not $a)
   Write-Host "not A:     " (!$a)
   Write-Host "A xor B:   " ($a -xor $b)

}</lang>

Prolog

In Prolog, ',' is used for and, ';' for or and \+ for not.

 ?- true,true.
true.

 ?- true,false.
false.

 ?- true;false.
true .

 ?- false;true.
true .

 ?- false;false.
false .

 ?- \+true.
false.

 ?- \+false.
true.

 ?- \+((true,false)).
true.


 ?- \+((true;false)).
false.


PureBasic

<lang PureBasic>Procedure LogicDebug(a,b)

 Debug a And b
 Debug a Or b
 Debug Not a
 Debug a XOr b

EndProcedure</lang>

Python

<lang python>def logic(a, b):

       print 'a and b:', a and b
       print 'a or b:' , a or b
       print 'not a:'  , not a</lang>

Note: Any normal object can be treated as a Boolean in Python. Numeric objects which evaluate to any non-zero value are "True" otherwise they are false. Non-empty strings, lists, tuples and other sequences are "True" otherwise they are false. The pre-defined None object is also treated as "False." In Python 2.3 pre-defined objects named True and False were added to the language; prior to that it was a common convention to include a line: False, True = 0, 1 to use these as names. Custom classes which implement __nonzero__ or __len__ or some other special methods can be implicitly evaluated as Booleans based on those results.

R

<lang R>logic <- function(a, b) {

 print(a && b)
 print(a || b)
 print(! a)

}

logic(TRUE, TRUE) logic(TRUE, FALSE) logic(FALSE, FALSE)</lang>

Racket

<lang Racket>#lang racket

(define (logic a b)

 (displayln (format "a and b equals ~a" (and a b)))
 (displayln (format "a or b equals ~a" (or a b)))
 (displayln (format "not a equals ~a" (not a)))
 (displayln (format "a nand b equals ~a" (nand a b)))
 (displayln (format "a nor b equals ~a" (nor a b)))
 (displayln (format "a implies b equals ~a" (implies a b)))
 (displayln (format "a xor b equals ~a" (xor a b))))</lang>

Rascal

<lang rascal>import IO;

public void logic(bool a, bool b){ println("a and b, is <a && b>"); println("a or b, is <a || b>"); println("a equivalent to b, is <a <==> b>"); println("a implies b, is <a ==> b>"); println("not a", <!a>"); }</lang>

Output:
rascal>logic(false, false);

a and b, is false
a or b, is false
a equivalent to b, is true
a implies b, is true
not a, true
ok

REBOL

<lang rebol>logics: func [a [logic!] b [logic!]] [

   print ['and tab a and b]
   print ['or  tab a or  b]
   print ['not tab   not a]
   print ['xor tab a xor b]
   print ['and~ tab and~ a b]
   print ['or~  tab or~  a b]
   print ['xor~ tab xor~ a b]
   print ['any tab any [a b]]
   print ['all tab all [a b]]

]</lang>

Example:

>> logics true false
and      false
or       true
not      false
xor      true
and~     false
or~      true
xor~     true
any      true
all      none

Retro

<lang Retro>: .bool ( f- ) [ "true" ] [ "false" ] if puts cr ;

logic ( ab- )
"\na = "  puts over .bool "b = " puts dup .bool
"\na and b = " puts 2dup and .bool
"\na  or b = " puts over  or .bool
"\nnot a = " puts not .bool ;</lang>

REXX

The REXX language's boolean values are well formed: 1 (true), and 0 (false).

Any other values will raise a REXX syntax condition (error). <lang rexx>/*REXX program to show some binary (AKA bit or logical) operations. */ x=1; y=0

   /*═════════════════════════════════════════════════echo   X,Y values*/

call TT 'name', "value" call TT 'x' , x call TT 'y' , y

   /*═════════════════════════════════════════════════negate X,Y values*/

call TT 'name', "negated" call TT 'x' , \x /*some REXXes support the ¬ char.*/ call TT 'y' , \y

   /*═════════════════════════════════════════════════AND    X,Y values*/

call TT 'value','value',"AND"; do x=0 to 1

                                   do y=0 to 1;  call TT x,y, x & y;  end
                                end
   /*═════════════════════════════════════════════════OR     X,Y values*/

call TT 'value','value',"OR"; do x=0 to 1

                                   do y=0 to 1;  call TT x,y, x | y;  end
                                end
   /*═════════════════════════════════════════════════XOR    X,Y values*/

call TT 'value','value',"XOR"; do x=0 for 2

                                  do y=0 for 2;  call TT x,y, x && y; end
                                end

exit /*stick a fork in it, we're done.*/ /*──────────────────────────────────TT subroutine───────────────────────*/ TT: parse arg a.1,a.2,a.3,a.4; hdr=length(a.1)\==1; if hdr then say; w=7

        do TT=0 to hdr;    _=
              do k=1 for arg();     _=_ center(a.k,w);     end   /*k*/
        say _
        a.=copies('─',w)
        end   /*TT*/

return</lang>

Output:
  name    value
 ─────── ───────
    x       1
    y       0

  name   negated
 ─────── ───────
    x       0
    y       1

  value   value    AND
 ─────── ─────── ───────
    0       0       0
    0       1       0
    1       0       0
    1       1       1

  value   value    OR
 ─────── ─────── ───────
    0       0       0
    0       1       1
    1       0       1
    1       1       1

  value   value    XOR
 ─────── ─────── ───────
    0       0       0
    0       1       1
    1       0       1
    1       1       0

RLaB

RLaB allows for standard logic operations. and/or/not are synonymous with &&/||/!. In the case when the argument is a real number (default type of argument) the default statement in the absence of if command is is the argument non-zero. Therefore <lang RLaB> >> x = 5 5 >> y = 0 0 >> !x 0 >> !y 1 >> x && y 0 </lang>

However, if arguments to the functions are of the type integer then the functions operate bit-wise. <lang RLaB> >> x = int(5) 5 >> y = int(0) 0 >> !x -6 >> !y -1 >> x && y 0 </lang>

Ruby

<lang ruby>def logic(a, b)

 print 'a and b: ', a && b, "\n"
 print 'a or b: ' , a || b, "\n"
 print 'not a: '  , !a    , "\n"
 print 'a xor b: ' , a ^ b, "\n"

end</lang> and/or/not are synonymous with &&/||/! albeit with lower precedence.

Scala

In vanilla Scala: <lang scala>def logical(a: Boolean, b: Boolean): Unit = {

 println("and: " + (a && b))
 println("or:  " + (a || b))
 println("not: " + !a)

}

logical(true, false)</lang>

With Scalaz: <lang scala>def logical(a: Boolean, b: Boolean): IO[Unit] = for {

 _ <- putStrLn("and: " ++ (a && b).shows)
 _ <- putStrLn("or:  " ++ (a || b).shows)
 _ <- putStrLn("not: " ++ (!a).shows)

} yield ()

logical(true, false).unsafePerformIO</lang>

Scheme

<lang scheme>(define (logic a b)

 (display "a and b is ")
 (display (and a b))
 (newline)
 (display "a or b is ")
 (display (or a b))
 (newline)
 (display "not a is ")
 (display (not a))
 (newline))</lang>

Seed7

<lang seed7>const proc: writeLogic (in boolean: a, in boolean: b) is func

 begin
   writeln("a and b is " <& a and b);
   writeln("a or b is " <& a or b);
   writeln("not a is " <& not a);
 end func;</lang>

Sidef

<lang ruby>func logic(a, b) {

   say ("a and b: ", a && b);
   say ("a  or b: ", a || b);
   say ("a xor b: ", a ^ b);
   say ("  not a: ", !a);

}

logic(false, true);</lang>

Output:
a and b: false
a  or b: true
a xor b: true
  not a: true

Slate

Some lines in this example are too long (more than 80 characters). Please fix the code if it's possible and remove this message.

<lang slate>{#/\. #\/. #not} do: [ |:func|

 func arity = 1 ifTrue: [inform: 'True ' ; (func as: String) ; ' = ' ; (func sendTo: {True}) printString.
                         inform: 'False ' ; (func as: String) ; ' = ' ; (func sendTo: {False}) printString.].
 func arity = 2 
   ifTrue: [{{True. True}. {True. False}. {False. True}. {False. False}} do:
             [ |:each| inform: each first printString ; (func as: String) ; each second printString ; ' = ' ; (func sendTo: each) printString]]

].</lang>

Output:
True/\True = True
True/\False = False
False/\True = False
False/\False = False
True\/True = True
True\/False = True
False\/True = True
False\/False = False
True not = False
False not = True

Smalltalk

Works with: GNU Smalltalk
Works with: Smalltalk/X

<lang smalltalk>|test| test := [ :a :b |

 ('%1 %2 %3 = %4' % { a. 'and'. b. (a & b) }) displayNl.
 ('%1 %2 %3 = %4' % { a. 'or'. b. (a | b) }) displayNl.
 ('%1 %2 = %3' % {'not'. a. (a not) }) displayNl

].

test value: true value: true. test value: false value: false. test value: true value: false. test value: false value: true.</lang>

Works with: Smalltalk/X

<lang smalltalk>a implies: b a xor: b</lang>

Standard ML

<lang sml>fun print_logic (a, b) = (

 print ("a and b is " ^ Bool.toString (a andalso b) ^ "\n");
 print ("a or b is " ^ Bool.toString (a orelse b) ^ "\n");
 print ("not a is " ^ Bool.toString (not a) ^ "\n")

)</lang>

Swift

<lang swift>func logic(a: Bool, b: Bool) {

 println("a AND b: \(a && b)");
 println("a OR b: \(a || b)");
 println("NOT a: \(!a)");

}</lang>

Additionally, ^ is used for XOR and == is used for "equal to" (a.k.a. bidirectional implication).

Tcl

<lang tcl>proc logic {a b} {

   puts "a and b: [expr {$a && $b}]"
   puts "a or b:  [expr {$a || $b}]"
   puts "not a:   [expr {!$a}]"

}</lang>

Toka

This is an adaption of the code from the Forth example. Toka provides TRUE/FALSE flags that are the same as the well-formed flags in Forth.

<lang toka>[ 0 <> [ ." true" ] [ ." false"] ifTrueFalse ] is .bool [ ( a b -- )

 cr ." a = " over .bool ."   b = " dup .bool
 cr ." a and b = " 2dup and .bool
 cr ." a  or b = " over  or .bool
 cr ." not a = " 0 = .bool

] is logic</lang>

V

Using stack shuffles.

<lang v>[mylogic

 [get2 [dup] dip swap [dup] dip].
  get2 and puts
  get2 or puts
  swap not puts
  pop
].</lang>

Using view. <lang v>[mylogic

  [get2 [a b : a b a b] view].
  get2 and puts
  get2 or puts
  swap not puts
  pop
].</lang>

Using internal defines

<lang v>[mylogic [a b] let

 a b and puts
 a b or puts
 a not puts

].</lang>

Visual Basic .NET

<lang vbnet>Function Test(ByVal a As Boolean, ByVal b As Boolean)

   Console.WriteLine("And " & a And b)
   Console.WriteLine("Or " & a Or b)
   Console.WriteLine("Not " & Not a)
   Console.WriteLine("Xor " & a Xor b)
   Console.WriteLine("And, short-circuited " & a AndAlso b)
   Console.WriteLine("Or, short-circuited " & a OrElse b)

End Function</lang>

XPL0

Logical operations and bitwise operations are the same. The command word 'false' = 0 and 'true' = -1. These values are produced by comparison operations, such as A>=B. Any integer not equal to zero is considered true. Real numbers cannot be used as booleans. Symbols can be used instead: & = and, ! = or, ~ = not, | = xor. Note that not 1, which is true, is $FFFFFFFE, which is also true. Despite this, it's simple and convenient to combine logical and bitwise operations.

<lang XPL0>include c:\cxpl\codes; \intrinsic 'code' declarations

func Logic(A, B); int A, B; [HexOut(0, A and B); ChOut(0, ^ );

HexOut(0, A or  B);  ChOut(0, ^ );
HexOut(0, not A);    ChOut(0, ^ );
HexOut(0, A xor B);

]; \Logic

[Logic(false, false); CrLf(0);

Logic(true, false);  CrLf(0);
Logic(true, true);   CrLf(0);
Logic(1, 1);   CrLf(0);
Logic(1, 2);   CrLf(0);

]</lang>

Output:
00000000 00000000 FFFFFFFF 00000000
00000000 FFFFFFFF 00000000 FFFFFFFF
FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF 00000000 00000000
00000001 00000001 FFFFFFFE 00000000
00000000 00000003 FFFFFFFE 00000003

XSLT

<lang xml><xsl:template name="logic">

 <xsl:param name="a" select="true()"/>
 <xsl:param name="b" select="false()"/>
 <fo:block>a and b = <xsl:value-of select="$a and $b"/></fo:block>
 <fo:block>a or b = <xsl:value-of select="$a or $b"/></fo:block>
 <fo:block>not a = <xsl:value-of select="not($a)"/></fo:block>
</xsl:template></lang>

zkl

Logical and/or do the logic and returns one of the ops. <lang zkl>fcn f(a,b){a and b} fcn g(a,b){a or b} fcn h(a){(not a)}</lang>

f(0,1) //-->0
f(1,2) //-->2
f(True,True)  //-->True
f(True,False) //-->False

g(0,1) //-->1
g(1,2) //-->1
g(True,True)  //-->True
g(True,False) //-->True

h(0) //-->True
h(1) //-->False
h(True)  //-->False
h(False) //-->True