JavaScript — The Conditional (Ternary) Operator Explained

Shorten your if statements into one line of code with the conditional operator

Brandon Morelli
codeburst
Published in
4 min readDec 18, 2017

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Starting With the Basics — The if statement

Using a conditional, like an if statement, allows us to specify that a certain block of code should be executed if a certain condition is met.

Consider the following example:

We have a person object that consists of a name, age, and driver property.

let person = {
name: 'tony',
age: 20,
driver: null
};

We want to test if the age of our person is greater than or equal to 16. If this is true, they’re old enough to drive and driver should say 'Yes'. If this is not true, driver should be set to 'No'.

We could use an if statement to accomplish this:

if (person.age >= 16) {
person.driver = 'Yes';
} else {
person.driver = 'No';
}

But what if I told you we could do the same exact thing in just one line of code? Well, here it is:

person.driver = person.age >=16 ? 'Yes' : 'No';

This shorter code yields us the same result of person.driver = 'Yes';

Now that you’ve seen the conditional ternary operator in action, we can explore how it works!

The Conditional (Ternary) Operator

First, we’ll take a look at the syntax of a typical if statement:

if ( condition ) {
value if true;
} else {
value if false;
}

Now, the ternary operator:

condition ? value if true : value if false

Here’s what you need to know:

  1. The condition is what you’re actually testing. The result of your condition should be true or false or at least coerce to either boolean value.
  2. A ? separates our conditional from our true value. Anything between the ? and the : is what is executed if the condition evaluates to true.
  3. Finally a : colon. If your condition evaluates to false, any code after the colon is executed.

Example — Driver Age

We’ll take a moment to revisit the initial example in this article:

let person = {
name: 'tony',
age: 20,
driver: null
};
person.driver = person.age >=16 ? 'Yes' : 'No';

The most important thing to note is the order of operations. Lets add some parenthesis to help you visualize the order in which code is executing:

person.driver = ((person.age >=16) ? 'Yes' : 'No';)

As you can hopefully now visualize, the very first thing that happens is our conditional is checking to see if person.age >=16 is true or false.

Since 20 is greater than 16, this evaluates to true. Here’s where we are now:

person.driver = (true ? 'Yes' : 'No';)

Since the condition of our conditional is true, the value between the ? and : is returned. In this case, that is 'Yes'.

Now that we have our return value, the final thing to do is to set it equal to our variable:

person.driver = 'Yes';

Awesome! Now lets move on to some more complex examples.

Example — Student Pricing

In this example, we’re coding for a movie theater. The movie theatre offers two ticket prices: $12 for the general public, and $8 for students.

Lets create a variable to keep track of whether a patron is a student or not:

let isStudent = true;

With this variable we can now use a ternary operator to change the price accordingly:

let price = isStudent ? 8 : 12console.log(price);
// 8

Since our isStudent boolean is true, the value of 8 is returned from the ternary to the price variable.

Example — Nested Ternary

But what if our movie theater from above gives a discount to students and seniors?

We can nest ternary operators to test multiple conditions.

For this scenario assume tickets are: $12 for the general public, $8 for students, and $6 for seniors.

Here’s what the code for a Senior citizen would look like:

let isStudent = false;
let isSenior = true;
let price = isStudent ? 8 : isSenior ? 6 : 10console.log(price);
// 6

There’s a lot going on in this code, so lets break it down:

  1. First we check to see if our patron is a student. Since isStudent is false, only the code after the first : is executed. After the : we have a new conditional:
  2. Our second conditional tests isSenior — since this is true, only the code after the ? but before the : is executed.
  3. price is then assigned the value of 6 which which we later log to the screen.

Example — Multiple operations

It is also possible to run multiple operations within a ternary. To do this, we must separate the operations with a comma. You can also, optionally, use parenthesis to help group your code:

let isStudent = true;
let price = 12;
isStudent ? (
price = 8,
alert('Please check for student ID')
) : (
alert('Enjoy the movie')
);

In the above example, the price of our movie is already set to $12. If isStudent is true, we adjust the price down to $8, then send an alert to have the cashier check for student ID. If isStudent is false, the above code is skipped, and we simply alert to enjoy the movie.

Closing Notes:

Thanks for reading! If you’re ready to finally learn Web Development, check out: The Ultimate Guide to Learning Full Stack Web Development in 6 months.

If you’re working towards becoming a better JavaScript Developer, check out: Ace Your Javascript Interview — Learn Algorithms + Data Structures.

I publish 4 articles on web development each week. Please consider entering your email here if you’d like to be added to my once-weekly email list, or follow me on Twitter.

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Creator of @codeburstio — Frequently posting web development tutorials & articles. Follow me on Twitter too: @BrandonMorelli