On 12/14/2014 04:51 PM, Marco van de Voort wrote:
More importantly, TRUE is generally defined as !FALSE, and vice versa
IMHO, (usually, ubiquitously ) FALSE is defined as a binary zero of
appropriate bit count (hence unambiguously) , while TRUE is defined as
not FALSE and hence it's binary
Marco van de Voort wrote:
For variant bools it is definitely -1. There is a comment about that too
somewhere.
I found
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2004/12/22/329884.aspx
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms221627(v=vs.85).aspx
Yet another type,
Michael Schnell wrote:
Now, in C (which does not feature a native boolean type, but boolean
operators) a *decent* boolean decision is e.g. if (a). But the silly C
programmer did if (a ==TRUE). Now the boolean variable a imported
from Delphi was presumed as FALSE instead of TRUE.
An
Adriaan van Os wrote:
Marco van de Voort wrote:
In our previous episode, Adriaan van Os said:
reveals 0 for False and -1 for True, where I had expected 0 for False
and
1 f
according to http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/eke1xt9y.aspx the
same
respectively in Visual Studio 2013.
There
Mark Morgan Lloyd wrote:
I agree that zero and false are generally equivalent, except possibly in
the case of unix shell scripts where it gets messy. It's arguably unsafe
to ever cast true to a number or enumeration, and possibly the best
behaviour would be to ensure that the compiler always
Am 14.12.2014 um 16:51 schrieb Marco van de Voort:
In our previous episode, Adriaan van Os said:
reveals 0 for False and -1 for True, where I had expected 0 for False and
1 f
according to http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/eke1xt9y.aspx the
same
respectively in Visual Studio 2013.
There
Hello folks!
Michael Schnell wrote 2014-12-15 09:28:05:
But the silly C programmer did if (a == TRUE).
I have seen this kind of nonsense way too often, even in Pascal code.
May I sincerely ask to include a hint/warning feature such as
Comparing booleans - bad style
in order to notify the
In our previous episode, Jasper Neumann said:
I have seen this kind of nonsense way too often, even in Pascal code.
May I sincerely ask to include a hint/warning feature such as
Comparing booleans - bad style
in order to notify the programmer to think twice.
This warning should be also
Hello folks!
MS But the silly C programmer did if (a == TRUE).
JN I have seen this kind of nonsense way too often,
even in Pascal code.
May I sincerely ask to include a hint/warning feature such as
Comparing booleans - bad style
in order to notify the programmer to think twice.
This warning
Pascal is about readability. A sentence like if this variable is true do
that reads better than if this variable do that. The danger is only
when the variable type and the constant representing TRUE are not
compatible. In C, since TRUE is usually an untyped #define, that can be
hard to
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