Operator EQV= (Equivalence and Assign)
Performs a bitwise-eqv (equivalence) and assigns the result to a variable
Syntax:
Usage:
lhs Eqv= rhs
Parameters:
lhs
The variable to assign to.
T1
Any numeric or boolean type.
rhs
The value to perform a bitwise-eqv (equivalence) with lhs.
T2
Any numeric or boolean type.
Description:
This operator performs a bitwise-eqv and assigns the result to a variable (for conversion of a boolean to an integer, false or true boolean value becomes 0 or -1 integer value). It is functionally equivalent to:
Eqv= compares each bit of its operands, lhs and rhs, and if both bits are the same (either both 0 or both 1), then the corresponding bit in the first operand, lhs, is set to 1, otherwise it is set to 0.
This operator can be overloaded for user-defined types as a member Operator using the appropriate syntax.
Note: Similarly to the operator '=[>]' (assign), the alternative symbol 'Eqv=>' can be also used.
Eqv= compares each bit of its operands, lhs and rhs, and if both bits are the same (either both 0 or both 1), then the corresponding bit in the first operand, lhs, is set to 1, otherwise it is set to 0.
This operator can be overloaded for user-defined types as a member Operator using the appropriate syntax.
Note: Similarly to the operator '=[>]' (assign), the alternative symbol 'Eqv=>' can be also used.
Examples:
Dim As UByte a = &b00110011
Dim As UByte b = &b01010101
a Eqv= b
'' Result a = &b10011001
Print Bin(a)
Dim As UByte b = &b01010101
a Eqv= b
'' Result a = &b10011001
Print Bin(a)
Dialect Differences:
- In the -lang qb dialect, this operator cannot be overloaded.
Differences from QB:
- New to FreeBASIC
See also:
Back to Assignment Operators
Back to Operators