sass-site/source/documentation/snippets/_truthiness-and-falsiness.erb
2019-01-09 14:36:31 -08:00

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## Truthiness and Falsiness
Anywhere `true` or `false` are allowed, you can use other values as well. The
values `false` and [`null`][] are *falsey*, which means Sass considers them to
indicate falsehood and cause conditions to fail. Every other value is considered
*truthy*, so Sass considers them to work like `true` and cause conditions to
succeed.
[`null`]: /documentation/values/null
For example, if you want to check if a string contains a space, you can just
write `index($string, " ")`. The [`str-index()` function][] returns `null` if
the string isn't found and a number otherwise.
[`str-index()` function]: /documentation/functions/string#str-index
<% heads_up do %>
Some languages consider more values falsey than just `false` and `null`. Sass
isn't one of those languages! Empty strings, empty lists, and the number `0`
are all truthy in Sass.
<% end %>