NEGATE: Difference between revisions

From QB64 Phoenix Edition Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Fix typo.)
(Add See Also items.)
Line 53: Line 53:
{{PageSeeAlso}}
{{PageSeeAlso}}
* [[_BIT]], [[&B]], [[_BYTE]]
* [[_BIT]], [[&B]], [[_BYTE]]
* [[AND]], [[XOR]], [[OR]]
* [[AND]], [[XOR]], [[OR]], [[_ANDALSO]], [[_ORELSE]]
* [[Binary]], [[Boolean]]
* [[Binary]], [[Boolean]]
* [[Mathematical Operations]]
* [[Mathematical Operations]]

Revision as of 18:35, 30 April 2024

_NEGATE is a boolean logical operator that will change a false statement to a true one and vice-versa.


Syntax

result = _NEGATE value


Description

  • Unlike NOT, which evaluates a value and returns the bitwise opposite, _NEGATE returns the logical opposite. Meaning that _NEGATE non_zero_value = 0.
  • Often called a negative logic operator, it returns the opposite of a value as true or false.


Availability


Examples

Example: NOT versus _NEGATE

DECLARE LIBRARY
    FUNCTION isdigit& (BYVAL n AS LONG)
END DECLARE

IF NOT isdigit(ASC("1")) THEN
    PRINT "NOT: 1 is not a digit."
ELSE
    PRINT "NOT: 1 is a digit."
END IF

IF _NEGATE isdigit(ASC("1")) THEN
    PRINT "_NEGATE: 1 is not a digit."
ELSE
    PRINT "_NEGATE: 1 is a digit."
END IF

END
NOT: 1 is not a digit.
_NEGATE: 1 is a digit.
Explanation: NOT is a bitwise operator that inverts all the bits in an integer, whereas _NEGATE is a logical operator that flips the truth value of a boolean expression.


See also



Navigation:
Main Page with Articles and Tutorials
Keyword Reference - Alphabetical
Keyword Reference - By usage
Report a broken link