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VB has operators AndAlso and OrElse, that perform short-circuiting logical conjunction.

Why is this not the default behavior of And and Or expressions since short-circuiting is useful in every case.

Strangely, this is contrary to most languages where && and || perform short-circuiting.

Andrei
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Robin Rodricks
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3 Answers3

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Because the VB team had to maintain backward-compatibility with older code (and programmers!)

If short-circuiting was the default behavior, bitwise operations would get incorrectly interpreted by the compiler.

The Ballad of AndAlso and OrElse by Panopticon Central

Our first thought was that logical operations are much more common than bitwise operations, so we should make And and Or be logical operators and add new bitwise operators named BitAnd, BitOr, BitXor and BitNot (the last two being for completeness). However, during one of the betas it became obvious that this was a pretty bad idea. A VB user who forgets that the new operators exist and uses And when he means BitAnd and Or when he means BitOr would get code that compiles but produces "bad" results.

lance
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Robin Rodricks
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    Actually, one could add short-circuiting behavior to bitwise operators without breaking code that didn't rely on side-effects, if the rule was that the bitwise "or" operator would evaluate the right hand operand unless the left-hand operand was equal to the all-bits-set value of the result type. On the other hand, some existing code--even code where both operands to an `And` or `Or` are produced by relational operators--does rely upon side effects of evaluating both sides of the Boolean operators. – supercat May 29 '12 at 17:49
  • Link is dead, but the content is here. Thanks! – Kyle Trauberman Dec 04 '15 at 21:35
  • Link fixed! Long live the link! – lance Apr 04 '20 at 21:01
1

I do not find short-circuiting to be useful in every case. I use it only when required. For instance, when checking two different and unconnected variables, it would not be required:

  If x > y And y > z Then

  End If

As the article by Paul Vick illustrates (see link provided by Ken Browning above), the perfect scenario in which short-circuiting is useful is when an object has be checked for existence first and then one of its properties is to be evaluated.

  If x IsNot Nothing AndAlso x.Someproperty > 0 Then

  End If

So, in my opinion both syntactical options are very much required.

Cerebrus
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    But in your first example if x – geekchic Jun 01 '12 at 15:02
  • The short-circuiting may not be needed if the 2 conditions are totally exclusive. That too is very much dependent on developers intention. If the developer want both conditions to be executed, then there is a fall-back that would force both the conditions executed. In the cases where the existence of the object has to be checked, short-circuiting become handy. – Amol Dixit Jan 01 '18 at 10:37
0

Explicit short-circuit makes sure that the left operand is evaluated first.

In some languages other than VB, logical operators may perform an implicit short circuit but may evaluate the right operator first (depending for instance on the complexity of the expressions at left and at right of the logical operator).

mouviciel
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