= NOT x
Performs a logical negation on an expression, as a bitwise negation. For
comparisons managed as a boolean result (TRUE
or FALSE
), result is TRUE
if expresions evaluate as FALSE
. The following table shows how result
is determined:
'NOT TRUE = FALSE
'
'NOT FALSE = TRUE
'
Generally speaking, the NOT
operator performs a bitwise negation of the bits of
the expression and sets the corresponding bit in result according to the
previous table.
Note that ugBASIC uses the convention, very common in BASICs of the 1970s and 1980s, of considering Boolean logic as implemented through the so-called “two's complement”.
In other words, the value FALSE
is associated with a number composed of
all 0
s, in terms of bits. The value TRUE
is, instead,
associated with a number composed of all 1
s, again in terms of bits.
According to the 2's complement representation, a number composed of all ones is
always equivalent to the number -1
, regardless of how many bits the
number is composed of, while a number composed of all zeros is always equivalent to zero.
According to this convention, there is a coincidence between bitwise and logical
operations: in fact, a bitwise NOT
, applied to all the bits of the number,
will be equivalent to the logical operation.
Because the logical and bitwise operators have lower precedence than other arithmetic and relational operators, all bitwise operations must be enclosed in parentheses to ensure accurate results.
IF NOT x THEN PRINT "x is FALSE" ELSE PRINT "x is TRUE" ENDIF
Nt
If you have encountered a problem using this command, if you think there is a bug or the explanation is unclear, please open an issue for this keyword on GitHub. Thank you!