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If Print
#1
Was there a time in Basic when IF was simply followed by a Print statement? Seems to me I did see some code like :

If A Print "...." but the wiki indicates the only time an IF condition is not followed by THEN is the use of GOTO.
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#2
(03-03-2023, 06:33 PM)Dimster Wrote: Was there a time in Basic when IF was simply followed by a Print statement? Seems to me I did see some code like :

If A Print "...." but the wiki indicates the only time an IF condition is not followed by THEN is the use of GOTO.

I just fired up my 386DX40 and Tandy 1000 HX and tried it with both GWBasic and Tandy Basic 2.02. Neither would accept that type of statement. Had to include THEN.
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#3
why not now? great idea for a new PE feature
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#4
So I'm also too lazy write THEN... (but then one might ask - why are you getting into Basic?)

Smile


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#5
(03-03-2023, 06:33 PM)Dimster Wrote: Was there a time in Basic when IF was simply followed by a Print statement? Seems to me I did see some code like :

If A Print "...." but the wiki indicates the only time an IF condition is not followed by THEN is the use of GOTO.

If you sneak a peek at https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_da...hB_3679804, you'll see that the grand-pappy of them all had the options:

IF condition THEN statement
IF condition GOTO line

I've also seen:
IF condition THEN line

But who knows what other possibilities have existed among all of the BASIC dialects.
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#6
I recall a version of BASIC that was once just : 

IF condition <line number> 

Because the only thing IF was used for was branching but the utility of IF condition Print  just seems unnecessary because IF condition THEN <almost any other code> works fine.



okay not completely related but does anyone recall why "?" was used as a shorthand for print?  It seems like a great shorthand for Input but baffling for print.  Is it just because "?" look a little like "P" ?
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#7
(03-03-2023, 08:15 PM)James D Jarvis Wrote: Okay not completely related but does anyone recall why "?" was used as a shorthand for print?  It seems like a great shorthand for Input but baffling for print.  Is it just because "?" look a little like "P" ?

I believe HP had a version of BASIC that used this (no idea why ? was chosen though) therefore Woz and Gates used it in their ROM implementations since HP's version was used on BASIC time-share systems back in the late 60s/early 70s.
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#8
(03-03-2023, 08:15 PM)James D Jarvis Wrote: okay not completely related but does anyone recall why "?" was used as a shorthand for print?  It seems like a great shorthand for Input but baffling for print.  Is it just because "?" look a little like "P" ?

Location on a standardized keyboard would be my guess.  If you wanted some symbol for shorthand for PRINT, wouldn't you want it close to the same keyboard location for the quote symbol?   

SHIFT-/ SHIFT-' SHIFT-'...  
?"" 

They're all right there together and quick and easy to type with one hand.  I'd think positioning had as much to do with the key chosen, as anything.
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#9
(03-04-2023, 12:06 AM)SMcNeill Wrote:
(03-03-2023, 08:15 PM)James D Jarvis Wrote: okay not completely related but does anyone recall why "?" was used as a shorthand for print?  It seems like a great shorthand for Input but baffling for print.  Is it just because "?" look a little like "P" ?

Location on a standardized keyboard would be my guess.  If you wanted some symbol for shorthand for PRINT, wouldn't you want it close to the same keyboard location for the quote symbol?   

SHIFT-/ SHIFT-' SHIFT-'...  
?"" 

They're all right there together and quick and easy to type with one hand.  I'd think positioning had as much to do with the key chosen, as anything.

I never considered that being a two-handed typer. My first computer was also a TI-99/4a ... now there's an annoying keyborad for you.
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#10
Got to remember, we're talking in the beginning of computing...  Those guys didn't have any clue about how to type, so I imagine a lot of the first programmers were "hunt-and-peck" typists.  Having the keys right close together like that probably helped them find and make use of them more efficiently.  Of all the symbols that could've been chosen for PRINT, I truly imagine the proximity of the question mark to the quotation key was a large part in why it was chosen for a shortcut.  Smile
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