De Morgan's rules explained

We have two values: T and F.

We can combine these values in three ways: NOT, AND, and OR.

NOT is the simplest:

  • NOT T = F
  • NOT F = T

We can write this as a truth table:

when given.. | results in...
============================
           T | F
           F | T

For conciseness

x | NOT x
=========
T | F
F | T

Think of NOT as the complement, that is, it turns one value into the other.

AND works on two values:

x y | x AND y
=============
T T | T
T F | F
F T | F
F F | F

AND is T only when both its arguments (the values of x and y in the truth table) are T — and F otherwise.

OR is T when at least one of its arguments is T:

x y | x OR y
=============
T T | T
T F | T
F T | T
F F | F

We can define more complex combinations. For example, we can write a truth table for x AND (y OR z), and the first row is below.

x y z | x AND (y OR z)
======================
T T T | ?

Once we know how to evaluate x AND (y OR z), we can fill in the rest of the table.

To evaluate the combination, evaluate the pieces and work up from there. The parentheses show which parts to evaluate first. What you know from ordinary arithmetic will help you work it out. Say you have 10 - (3 + 5). First you evaluate the part in parentheses to get

10 - 8

and evaluate that as usual to get the answer, 2.

Evaluating these expressions works similarly. We know how OR works from above, so we can expand our table a little:

x y z | y OR z | x AND (y OR z)
===============================
T T T | T      | ?

Now it's almost like we're back to the x AND y table. We simply substitute the value of y OR z and evaluate. In the first row, we have

T AND (T OR T)

which is the same as

T AND T

which is simply T.

We repeat the same process for all 8 possible values of x, y, and z (2 possible values of x times 2 possible values of y times 2 possible values of z) to get

x y z | y OR z | x AND (y OR z)
===============================
T T T | T      | T
T T F | T      | T
T F T | T      | T
T F F | F      | F
F T T | T      | F
F T F | T      | F
F F T | T      | F
F F F | F      | F

Some expressions may be more complex than they need to be. For example,

x | NOT (NOT x)
===============
T | T
F | F

In other words, NOT (NOT x) is equivalent to just x.

DeMorgan's rules are handy tricks that let us convert between equivalent expressions that fit certain patterns:

  • NOT (x AND y) = (NOT x) OR (NOT y)
  • NOT (x OR y) = (NOT x) AND (NOT y)

(You might think of this as how NOT distributes through simple AND and OR expressions.)

Your common sense probably already understands these rules! For example, think of the bit of folk wisdom that "you can't be in two places at once." We could make it fit the first part of the first rule:

NOT (here AND there)

Applying the rule, that's another way of saying "you're not here or you're not there."

Exercise: How might you express the second rule in plain English?

For the first rule, let's look at the truth table for the expression on the left side of the equals sign.

x y | x AND y | NOT (x AND y)
=============================
T T | T       | F
T F | F       | T
F T | F       | T
F F | F       | T

Now the righthand side:

x y | NOT X | NOT Y | (NOT x) or (NOT y)
========================================
T T | F     | F     | F
T F | F     | T     | T
F T | T     | F     | T
F F | T     | T     | T

The final values are the same in both tables. This proves that the expressions are equivalent.

Exercise: Prove that the expressions NOT (x OR y) and (NOT x) AND (NOT y) are equivalent.


Looking over some of the answers, I think I can explain it better by using conditions that are actually related to each other.

DeMorgan's Law refers to the fact that there are two identical ways to write any combination of two conditions - specifically, the AND combination (both conditions must be true), and the OR combination (either one can be true). Examples are:

Part 1 of DeMorgan's Law

Statement: Alice has a sibling.
Conditions: Alice has a brother OR Alice has a sister.
Opposite: Alice is an only child (does NOT have a sibling).
Conditions: Alice does NOT have a brother, AND she does NOT have a sister.

In other words: NOT [A OR B] = [NOT A] AND [NOT B]

Part 2 of DeMorgan's Law

Statement: Bob is a car driver.
Conditions: Bob has a car AND Bob has a license.
Opposite: Bob is NOT a car driver.
Conditions: Bob does NOT have a car, OR Bob does NOT have a license.

In other words: NOT [A AND B] = [NOT A] OR [NOT B].

I think this would be a little less confusing to a 12-year-old. It's certainly less confusing than all this nonsense about truth tables (even I'm getting confused looking at all of those).


It is just a way to restate truth statements, which can provide simpler ways of writing conditionals to do the same thing.

In plain English:
When something is not This or That, it is also not this and not that.
When something is not this and that, it is also not this or not that.

Note: Given the imprecision of the English language on the word 'or' I am using it to mean a non-exclusive or in the preceding example.

For example the following pseudo-code is equivalent:
If NOT(A OR B)...
IF (NOT A) AND (NOT B)....

IF NOT(A AND B)...
IF NOT(A) OR NOT(B)...