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Home/ Questions/Q 7848527
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T18:14:14+00:00 2026-06-02T18:14:14+00:00

I am using jQuery 1.7.1 I am just starting to use the JavaScript ternary

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I am using jQuery 1.7.1

I am just starting to use the JavaScript ternary operator to replace simple if/else statements. I have done so successfully in several places. I was surprised when I successfully made something else work when I thought for sure it wouldn’t, but I tried anyway.

Here’s the original statement:

function updateItem() {
    $this = $(this);
    var IsChecked = $this.hasClass("IsChecked");
    if (IsChecked == true){
        removeItem($this);
    } else {
        addItem($this);
    }
}

Here’s the same function using the ternary operator:

function updateItem() {
    $this = $(this);
    var IsChecked = $this.hasClass("IsChecked");
    (IsChecked == true) ? removeItem($this) : addItem($this);
}

I was surprised because all of the examples I saw being used were merely setting variables like this:

x = (1 < 2) ? true : false;

My question is whether this is “normal” use and will it work in most versions of JavaScript? Where will it fail? Are there other less obvious uses for it?

UPDATE — Thanks for the “real world” advice!!!

I am using this as my function:

function updateItem() {
    $this = $(this);
    $this.hasClass("IsChecked") ? removeItem($this) : addItem($this);
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T18:14:17+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 6:14 pm

    Heh, there are some pretty exciting uses of ternary syntax in your question; I like the last one the best…

    x = (1 < 2) ? true : false;
    

    The use of ternary here is totally unnecessary – you could simply write

    x = (1 < 2);
    

    Likewise, the condition element of a ternary statement is always evaluated as a Boolean value, and therefore you can express:

    (IsChecked == true) ? removeItem($this) : addItem($this);
    

    Simply as:

    (IsChecked) ? removeItem($this) : addItem($this);
    

    In fact, I would also remove the IsChecked temporary as well which leaves you with:

    ($this.hasClass("IsChecked")) ? removeItem($this) : addItem($this);
    

    As for whether this is acceptable syntax, it sure is! It’s a great way to reduce four lines of code into one without impacting readability. The only word of advice I would give you is to avoid nesting multiple ternary statements on the same line (that way lies madness!)

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