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The JWT expression parser accepts the most common comparison operators as well as logical operators

The main purpose of these operators is to construct complex logical comparisons by linking individual expressions. 

Comparison operators

The operators, their meaning and the applicable data types you can use them with are listed below.

A comparison always returns a BOOLEAN value.

Overview of all case-sensitive comparison operators


All operators respect the case of the characters.


OperatorMeaningExamples (all examples return true)
= equal to
1=1
true = true
[1, 2, 3] = [1, 2, 3]
["blue", "red", "green"] = ["blue", "red", "green"]

When working with Lists, each elements' existence and its order are being evaluated.

!= not equal to


0 != 1
"HELLO" != "Hello"
%{issue.description} != "Hello"
true != false
[1, 2, 3] != [1, 3, 2]
["blue", "red", "green"] != ["blue", "green", "red"]

When working with Lists, each elements' existence and its order are being evaluated.

< less than


1 < 2
"abc" < "bbc"
"abc" < "abcd"
> greater than


2 > 1
"bbc" > "abc"
"abcd" > "abc"
<= less than or equal to


3 <= 3
>= greater than or equal to


"Hello world! Hello *" >= "Hello world"
~ contains


"Hello world!" ~ "world" #true. The text "world" is contained in the first text.
%{issue.components.leads} ~ %{system.currentUser} #checks whether "Component leads" contains the "Current user".
[1, 2, 3, 2, 2, 4] ~ [2, 1, 2] #true
["blue", "red", "green", "red", "white", "red"] ~ ["red", "green", "red"] #true
["green", "red"] ~ ["red", "green", "red"] #false
!~ does not contain


"world" !~ "Hello world!" #false. The text "world" is contained in the first text.
%{issue.fixVersions} !~ %{issue.versions} #false if all "Affects version/s" are also selected as "Fix version/s".
[1, 2, 3, 2, 2, 4] !~ [2, 1, 1, 4] #true
["blue", "red", "green", "red", "red"] !~ ["red", "green", "green", "red"] #true
in is contained in


"world" in "Hello world!" #true. The text "world" is contained in the first text.
%{system.currentUser} in %{issue.components.leads} #true if current user is a component lead of any of the issue's components 
[1, 1, 2] in [2, 1, 1, 1, 4] #true
["blue", "red", "red"] in ["red", "green", "blue", "red", "red"] #true
2 in [1, 2, 3] #true
"blue" in ["red, "blue", "white"] #true
not in is not contained in


"Hello world!" not in "world" #true
%{issue.versions} not in %{issue.fixVersions} #false if all "Affects version/s" are also selected as "Fix version/s".
[1, 1, 2, 2] not in [2, 1, 1, 1, 4] #true
["blue", "red", "red", "blue"] not in ["red", "blue", "red", "red"] #true 
5 not in [1, 2, 3, 3, 4] #true
"orange" not in ["blue", "red", "white"] #true
any in any element is in


%{issue.versions} any in %{issue.fixVersions} # true if any selected "Affects version/s" has also been selected as "Fix version/s". 
[1, 3] any in [3, 4, 5] #true
["blue", "white"] any in ["black", "white", "green"] #true
none in no single element is in


%{issue.versions} none in %{issue.fixVersions} #true if no selected "Affects version/s" has also been selected as "Fix version/s". 
[1, 2] none in [3, 4, 5] 
["blue", "red"] none in ["black", "white", "green"]

When comparing lists, the exact number of occurence (cardinality) per element must match. 

Parser expressionOutputDescription
["blue", "red", "green", "red", "white", "red"] ~ ["red", "green", "red"]
trueThis expression returns true, since the element (text) red appears at least twice in the first list and the element (text) green occurs at least once in the first list.
["green", "red"] ~ ["red", "green", "red"]
falseThis expression returns false, since the element (text) red does not appear twice in the first list. 
Overview of all case ignoring comparison operators

The following comparison operators can be used with   TEXT and TEXT LIST  data types.

All operators ignore the case of the characters.

OperatorMeaningExamples (all examples return true)
=~ equal to


"HELLO" =~ "Hello" #true
"up" =~ "UP" #true
["blue", "red", "green"] =~ ["Blue", "RED", "Green"] #true
!=~ not equal to


" HELLO" !=~ "Hello" #false, since there is a whitespace in the first text
"up" !=~ "down" #true
("up" !=~ "UP") #false 
["blue", "red"] !=~ ["Blue", "green"] #true
["blue", "red"] !=~ ["Red", "BLUE"] #true
["blue", "red", "green"] !=~ ["Blue", "RED", "Green"] #false
~~ contains


"Hello World!" ~~ "world" #true, checks whether a text contains a substring. 
"A small step for a man" ~~ "STEP" #true, checks whether a text contains a substring. 
["one", "two", "three"] ~~ ["TWO", "One"] #true, checks whether a text list contains all the elements of another text list.
!~~ does not contain


"Hello World!" !~~ "bye" #true, checks whether a string does not contain a substring. 
"A small step for a man" !~~ "big" #true, checks whether a string does not contain a substring. 
["one", "two", "three"] !~~ ["Four"] #true, checks whether a text list does not contain a single element of another text list. 
(["one", "two", "three"] !~~ ["TWO"]) = false
in~ is contained in


"world" in~ "Hello World!" #true, checks whether a substring is contained in another text. 
"STEP" in~ "A small step for a man" #true, checks whether a substring is contained in another text. 
["TWO", "One"] in~ ["one", "two", "three"] #true, checks whether all the elements of a text list are contained in another text list.
not in~ is not contained in


"bye" not in~ "Hello World!" #true, checks whether a substring is not contained in another text. 
"big" not in~ "A small step for a man" #true, checks whether a substring is not contained in another text. 
["Four"] not in~ ["one", "two", "three"] #true, checks whether any of the elements of a text list are not contained in another text list. 
["TWO"] not in~ ["one", "two", "three"] #false
any in~ any element is in

["blue", "violet"] any in~ ["Blue", "Red", "Green"] #true, checks whether any element of the first list in contained in the second list.
["Five", "One"] any in~ ["FOUR", "FIVE", "SIX"]"bye" 
none in~ no single element is in


["Orange"] any in~ ["red", "blue", "green"] 
(["orange"] any in~ ["Red", "Orange"]) = false



Applicable data types

Below you find a comprehensive matrix of all operators and applicable data types.


Comparison Operator

BOOLEAN

NUMBER

TEXT

NUMBER LIST

TEXT LIST

ISSUE LIST

MULTI-VALUE FIELD

= (tick)(tick)XXXXX
!= XXXXXXX
<
XX----
> -XX----
<= -XX----
>= -XX----
~ --XXXXX
!~ --XXXXX
in --XXXXX
not in --XXXXX
any in ---XXXX
none in ---XXXX
=~ --X-X--
!=~ --X-X--
~~ --X-X--
!~~ --X-X--
in~ --X-X--
not in~ --X-X--
any in~ ----X--
none in~ ----X--

Things to be aware of

Please be aware the both operators of the respective comparison must have the same data type. The only exceptions are the following:

  • Automatic casting from Number to String: Whenever you write a numeric term at the right-hand side of a comparison operator like =, and the left-hand side is occupied by a string term, the parser will automatically transform the right-hand side term into a string (e.g. "30" = 30 will be interpreted the same way as "30" = "30")
  • Single values as operator in list operations: Operators ~, !~, in  and not in can be used for checking a single element (number or string) against a NUMBER LIST or a TEXT LIST
  • Comparison with the null value: A field which is not set or an empty string is interpreted as null. A field returning NUMBER, which doesn't contain a number, is also interpreted as null.
Things to remember
RememberExample
Operators ~, !~, in  and not in can be used for checking a single element (number or text) against a number list or a text list
  • 1 in [1, 2, 3] 
  • ["blue", "red"] ~ "blue" .
Operators ~, !~, in  and  not in when used with a text are useful to look for substrings in another string.
  • "I love coding" ~ "love"
  • "I don't like Mondays" !~ "Fridays"
  • "love" in "I love coding"
  • "Fridays" not in "I don't like Mondays".
Operators  ~, !~, in  and  not in respect cardinality, i.e., container list must have at least the same number of elements as contained list.
  • [1, 1] in [1, 1, 1]
  • [1, 1] not in [1, 2, 3] .
Operators = and != , when used for comparing lists, require to have the same elements, with the same cardinality and the same order.
  • [1, 2, 3] = [1, 2, 3]
  • [4, 5, 6] != [4, 6, 5] .

Operators <, >, <= and >= work according to lexicographical order when comparing strings.



Logical operators

The table below lists all logical operators that can be used for linking logical terms in an expression.

Logical operators take logical terms (which return BOOLEAN values) as operands and can thus be built using:

  • a boolean value
  • a comparison
  • a logical term enclosed by brackets ()
  • two logical terms connected with a logical operator, where boolean literals and comparisons themselves are logical terms


Overview of all logical operators


Operator

Meaning

Precedence

NOT or  ! logical negation1 (highest)
AND or & logical conjunction2
OR or  | logical disjunction3
XOR exclusive or, i.e.,  a XOR b   is equivalent to   a AND !b OR !a AND b 3
IMPLIES or  IMP logical implication, i.e.,  a IMPLIES b   is equivalent to  !a OR b 4
XNOR or EQV logical equivalence, i.e.,  a EQV b   is equivalent to  a IMPLIES b AND b IMPLIES a 4 (lowest)

A single logical term can be enclosed by brackets () in order to increase the readability of the expressions or to define a precedence which differs from the given one. 

Logical operators can also be written in lower case (e.g. and, or)


Conditional operator (IF - THEN -ELSE)

The conditional operator  ?  :  is a powerful operator to construct conditional expressions.

It basically allows you to construct the following expression: IF boolean_expression true THEN  term_1   ELSE  term_2.

<boolean_expression> ? <term_1> : <term_2> 

The conditional operator is extremely helpful when being used in calculated fields.

Examples of using the conditional operator
ExpressionDescription
%{issue.priority} = "Highest" ? "Please have a look at this issue immediately" : "No stress, come back later" 

IF the priority of an issue is Blocker,

THEN this function will return the TEXT "Please have a look at this issue immediately"

ELSE it will return the TEXT "No stress, come back later".

{issue.duedate} != null ? ({...duedate} - {...currentDateTime}) / {HOUR} : 0

IF an issue does have a due date set (due date is not null),

THEN this function will return the NUMBER of hours from the current date-time to the due date 

ELSE it will return the NUMBER 0.

%{issue.somefield} = "Red" ? "Color" : "No color" 

IF a custom field (e.g. a select list) has a value of Red,

THEN this function will return the text Color

ELSE it will return No color.

timePart({...currentDateTime}, LOCAL) > 21:00 AND timePart({...currentDateTime}, LOCAL) < 7:00 ? "Night" : "Day"

IF the current time is between 21:00 and 7:00

THEN this function will return the  TEXT "Night" ,

ELSE it will return the TEXT "Day".