|
On Fri, 3 Nov 2000, Jim Langston wrote:
> Well, to be honest, the statement actually read
>
> a=b=c=d=0=e
>
> To this day I don't know if that was a typo on the programmers part, or
>something
> the compiler could actually figure out. I think that is why I hate it, the
>first
> time I ever saw it, it was abused. (To me this would be saying that A, B, C
>and D
> are equal to the boolean expression 0 = e but I just don't know).
>
This statement would only be valid in BASIC, as far as I know. In BASIC
when you do an assignment, only the first = sign is assignment, the rest
are comparisons. (At least, this is the way I currently understand it)
Therefore, this statement would equate to this:
a = (b=(c=(d=(0=e))))
But, again, I prefer having a different operator for assignment vs.
comparison, as I detailed in the last post.
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