Operator precedence might be one of the most confusing parts of the Ruby language. Even the most popular style guides recommend you just use && and || over AND and OR . But just for kicks, let’s figure out once and forever how this thing actually works.

As always, an example is worth a thousand pictures.

result = true and false result # => true result = true && false result # => false

So why is there a difference between those two. I know when I first saw the two variants ( && and AND ) I thought, AND is just a nicer way of writing && . But it’s not.

Ruby uses Short-circuit evaluation, and so it evaluates the first argument to decide if it should continue with the second one.

When the first argument of the AND function evaluates to false , the overall value must be false ; and when the first argument of the OR function evaluates to true , the overall value must be true.

Think about the order in which they are evaluated (the precedence).

&& = and

So let’s apply that to the example.

((result = true) and false) # => true

So applying the short-circuit evaluation here, looks like this.

When the first argument of the AND function (i.e. the result = true , because = has higher precedence than and ) evaluates to false , the overall value must be false. Well, in this case the value is not false , so the value of the first expression is returned instead.

How about the && operator?

(result = (true && false)) # => false

The fact that && has higher precedence than the assignment operator ( = ), makes it so that the arguments to the AND function are true , and false . The ones in the inner parenthesis. And because of the short-circuit evaluation, the first value is returned. Thus the value of the expression is true .

Think control flow

The main purpose of the and operator is actually to control the flow of logic.

You can use the and operator for chaining operations that depend on each other.

buy_milk() and cook_breakfast() and feed_family()

You can also think of and as a reversed if statement modifier.

next if result = 2.even? # becomes result = 2.even? and next

What about || and OR ?

It’s the same thing. The right hand side is never evaluated if the left hand side is truthy. Let’s prove this.

true || baz() # => true false || baz() # => NoMethodError: undefined method `baz' true or baz() # => true false or baz() # => NoMethodError: undefined method `baz'

So you could do something cool like this.

cook_dinner() or raise(RuntimeError, "Not in the mood.")

That works because the right hand side will only be evaluated if cook_dinner() evaluates to false (i.e. not truthy).

Think control flow

or is like a reversed unless modifier. So the previous example could be written like this.

raise(RuntimeError, "Not in the mood.") unless cook_dinner()

Choosing the right one of these options could improve the readability of your code.