At 06:01 PM 7/17/2009, Adrian Wontroba wrote:

No it is succinctly correct but confusing (the UNIX way?). These
operators work on exit codes where 0 = success = true and and !0 =
failure = false.

As I understand it, when it comes to UNIX result codes, 0 doesn't really mean "true" -- it means "no error." (In other words, it means "false.") Whereas any nonzero value means there was an error (and indicates what kind). In other words, it means that it's "true" that there was an error.

So, the semantics of the operators are supposed to be that "false" is "true?" Aaargh!

No wonder I don't use short circuit operators much. When zero equals one, it gets rather confusing.

It's also confusing that they are called "AND" and "OR" operators (and look like the short-circuit AND and OR operators in other languages, which all do what you would expect).

--Brett

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