~

From BR Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

The logical unary negation operator ~ reverses the meaning of its operand. The operand must be numeric. Note that in BR, 1 means true and 0 means false.

The ~ operator works as follows:

  • The result is true if the operand is false
  • The result is false if the operand is true.

The effect of the ~ operator is equivalent to the NOT operator, with one difference: ~ works everywhere whereas NOT will only work in If and PRINT statements.

~ is normally used in conjunction with an IF Statement.

The following examples demonstrates the use of ~:

00010 let x =  1 ! 1 is same as true
00020 let y = ~x ! not true evaluates to false, which is 0 in BR


00010 let result = ~( 2 > 5 ) ! 2 > 5 evaluates to false, so ~( 2 > 5 ) evaluates to true, which is 1 in BR
00020 print result            ! since result is 1, that's what will print on the screen