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language design - Why does Ruby have TrueClass and FalseClass instead of a single Boolean class?

I was working on serializing values when found out about this one. Ruby has a TrueClass class, and a FalseClass class, but it has no Boolean class. I'd like to know why is this.

I see some advantages in using a Boolean; for example, string parsing could be centralized on it.

Ruby developers are smarter than me, so there must be a lot of good reasons that I just don't see. But right now it looks to me like having OneClass and a TwoClass instead of Fixnum.

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The purpose of a class is to group similar objects, or objects with similar behavior together. 1 and 2 are very similar, therefore it makes perfect sense for them to be in the same class. true and false however are not similar. In fact, their whole point is that they are exactly the opposite of each other and have opposite behavior. Therefore, they don't belong in the same class.

Can you give an example of what sort of common behavior you would implement in a Boolean class? I can't think of anything.

Let's just look at the behavior that TrueClass and FalseClass have: there's exactly four methods there. No more. And in every single case, the two methods do exactly the opposite. How and why would you put that in a single class?

Here's how you implement all those methods:

class TrueClass
  def &(other)
    other
  end

  def |(_)
    self
  end

  def ^(other)
    !other
  end

  def to_s
    'true'
  end
end

And now the other way around:

class FalseClass
  def &(_)
    self
  end

  def |(other)
    other
  end

  def ^(other)
    other
  end

  def to_s
    'false'
  end
end

Granted, in Ruby, there is a lot of "magic" that is going on behind the scenes and that is not actually handled by TrueClass and FalseClass but rather hardwired into the interpreter. Stuff like if, &&, || and !. However, in Smalltalk, from which Ruby borrowed a lot including the concept of FalseClass and TrueClass, all of these are implemented as methods as well, and you can do the same thing in Ruby:

class TrueClass
  def if
    yield
  end

  def ifelse(then_branch=->{}, _=nil)
    then_branch.()
  end

  def unless
  end

  def unlesselse(_=nil, else_branch=->{})
    ifelse(else_branch, _)
  end

  def and
    yield
  end

  def or
    self
  end

  def not
    false
  end
end

And again the other way around:

class FalseClass
  def if
  end

  def ifelse(_=nil, else_branch=->{})
    else_branch.()
  end

  def unless
    yield
  end

  def unlesselse(unless_branch=->{}, _=nil)
    ifelse(_, unless_branch)
  end

  def and
    self
  end

  def or
    yield
  end

  def not
    true
  end
end

A couple of years ago, I wrote the above just for fun and even published it. Apart from the fact that the syntax looks different because Ruby uses special operators while I use only methods, it behaves exactly like Ruby's builtin operators. In fact, I actually took the RubySpec conformance testsuite and ported it over to my syntax and it passes.


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