I saw one example

int x = 10;
int y = 5;

bool isGreater = x > y;

printf("%d", isGreater);

But I could write this

int x = 10;
int y = 5;

printf("%d", x > y);

I am a complete beginner and I have no real reason why I would or would not want to deal with boolean variables, but I want to understand their raison d’être.

Edit: typo city

  • Rossphorus@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    C++ actually does this ‘optimisation’ for std::vector<bool>. I say ‘optimisation’ because it effectively trades time for space, which is usually the opposite of what you want - space is cheap, time usually isn’t. Sometimes it’s a good tradeoff though - it’s common in embedded development where you might only have a few kB of RAM.