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I don’t know when to use the syntax Or or OrElse and/or And or AndAlso, because I don’t understand what difference it makes in the logic circuit.
Being in C#, And = &, AndAlso = && and Or = |, OrElse = ||.
I need to test the following expression to know if the whole lastToken is zero (0) and also if it is greater than 2:
if(lastToken == 0 & lastToken > 2) { ... }
But I don’t know if I use & or &&.
Which one should I use?
Let me get this straight,
&checks the two expressions if both aretrue, the expression itself is true, if one is false, the expression is false?– CypherPotato
Yes, and that could be a waste of time. Logically if an expression with AND has at least one False, there is no need to check the other, so there is &&, it checks the first and ends there even if it is false.
– user92257
Did you forget to mention that
&is an arithmetic operator while&&is a logical operator. The expression21 & 1is valid but the expression21 && 1is not valid.– Bruno Costa
I particularly don’t like to use the operator
&(that will always be called to mebitwise-and) if it is not an operation that I know beforehand that I will do operations on the bits. Like, when I want that3 & 1be true and6 & 1be false– Jefferson Quesado