false and true
From Free Pascal wiki
Revision as of 13:03, 4 May 2018 by Kai Burghardt (talk | contribs) (add Category:Code, Category:Pascal, Category:Reserved words)
The constants false
and true
are used to define the false and true conditions of a boolean
variable.
They are manifest constants that are defined as part of the standard data types the compiler initially knows about.
These constant values must be predefined by the compiler as there is no way to define them in terms of anything else. They are reserved words for FPC.
internal value
program falseDemo(input, output, stderr);
uses
typInfo;
begin
writeLn(false); // prints FALSE
// enumerative actions ------------------------------------------
writeLn(ord(false)); // prints 0
writeLn(succ(false)); // prints TRUE
// next two statements generate out-of-range compile-time warnings
writeLn(pred(false)); // prints TRUE
writeLn(succ(succ(false))); // prints TRUE
// data type ----------------------------------------------------
writeLn(sizeOf(false)); // prints 1
writeLn(bitSizeOf(false)); // prints 8
writeLn(PTypeInfo(typeInfo(false))^.kind); // prints tkBool
writeLn(PTypeInfo(typeInfo(false))^.name); // prints Boolean
end.
When typecasting or interpreting any numeric value as a boolean value, it is important to know, that any non-zero value means true
whilst only 0
(zero) is false
.