Lars Noodén wrote:
On 03/02/2013 11:27 AM, Tom Furie wrote:
On Sat, Mar 02, 2013 at 07:38:41PM +1300, Chris Bannister wrote:
These days it is != :) (I think <> was "not equal to", was it?)
Technically, it's "less than or greater than", but I suppose it
amounts to the same thing :)
Cheers, Tom
In pascal, <> means not equal to. I think some of the other languages
from that era do the same. For what it's worth, Free Pascal 2.6.2 was
recently released:
And then you get to the more interesting variants that involve type
comparisons
e.g., /= and =/= from erlang (not equal and not exactly equal)
and that's before comparisons that involve pointers (e.g. Lisp's eq) :-)
--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is. .... Yogi Berra
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