LET: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "The LET is a useless statement designed by cavemen when they started programming. {{PageSyntax}} : '''[LET]''' {{Parameter|variable}} = {{Parameter|expression}} {{PageDescription}} * {{InlineCode}}LET a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}} is the same as {{InlineCode}}a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}}, but wastes 4 extra bytes of program space. ''Notes:'' LET is '''optional''', it's the only keyword where the '''entire keyword''' is optional :-) {{PageSeeAlso}} * Cavemen * [...") |
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[[LET]] is a needless statement today. It was designed for the very early BASIC dialects to assign a value to a variable. | |||
{{PageSyntax}} | {{PageSyntax}} | ||
: | : [[LET]] {{Parameter|variable}} = {{Parameter|expression}} | ||
{{PageDescription}} | {{PageDescription}} | ||
* {{InlineCode}}LET a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}} is the same as {{InlineCode}}a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}}, but wastes 4 extra bytes of program space. | * {{InlineCode}}{{Cl|LET}} a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}} is the very same as {{InlineCode}}a = 12{{InlineCodeEnd}}, but wastes 4 extra bytes of program space. | ||
* That said, [[LET]] is '''optional''', it's the only keyword where the '''entire keyword''' is optional.😀 | |||
{{PageSeeAlso}} | |||
{{PageSeeAlso}} | |||
* [[Variable]] | * [[Variable]] | ||
{{PageNavigation}} | {{PageNavigation}} |
Latest revision as of 01:56, 23 January 2023
LET is a needless statement today. It was designed for the very early BASIC dialects to assign a value to a variable.
Syntax
- LET variable = expression
Description
- LET a = 12 is the very same as a = 12, but wastes 4 extra bytes of program space.
- That said, LET is optional, it's the only keyword where the entire keyword is optional.😀
See also