In Delphi I can do the following with a boolean variable:
If NOT bValue then
begin
//do some stuff
end;
Does the equivalent in Java use the !?
If !(bValue) {
//do some stuff
}
In Delphi I can do the following with a boolean variable:
If NOT bValue then
begin
//do some stuff
end;
Does the equivalent in Java use the !?
If !(bValue) {
//do some stuff
}
Yes, but inside the bracket:
if (!bValue) {
}
You'd normally not use any sort of data type prefix in Java as well, so it would more likely be something like:
if (!isGreen) { // or some other meaningful variable name
}
You're close; the proper syntax is:
if (!bValue) {
//do some stuff
}
The entire conditional expression must be inside the parenthesis; the condition in this case involve the unary logical complement operator !
(JLS 15.15.6).
Additionally, Java also has the following logical binary operators:
&
, ^
and |
&&
and JLS 15.24 Conditional-or ||
There are also compound assignment operators (JLS 15.26.2) &=
, |=
, ^=
.
== true
and == false
true
and false
!
when necessary