Difference between revisions of "Char"

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m
(Fix Char(49) typo.)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
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For example:
 
For example:
<syntaxhighlight>
+
<syntaxhighlight lang=pascal>
 
  var ch: char;
 
  var ch: char;
 
       c: byte;  
 
       c: byte;  
Line 21: Line 21:
 
The above program corrected to legal use:
 
The above program corrected to legal use:
  
<syntaxhighlight>
+
<syntaxhighlight lang=pascal>
 
  var ch: char;
 
  var ch: char;
 
       c: byte;  
 
       c: byte;  
Line 28: Line 28:
 
     ch := 'A';      c := 65;        { are the same action, and are legal }
 
     ch := 'A';      c := 65;        { are the same action, and are legal }
 
     ch := chr(65);  c := ord('A');  { now legal }
 
     ch := chr(65);  c := ord('A');  { now legal }
     ch := Char(49); c := Byte('A'); { also legal and guaranteed to happen at compile time }
+
     ch := Char(65); c := Byte('A'); { also legal and guaranteed to happen at compile time }
 
  end.
 
  end.
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
</syntaxhighlight>
  
A CHAR variable can also be used as a loop control variable:
+
A [[For|FOR]] loop control variable can be any enumerable (capable of being put into one-to-one correspondence with the positive integers) which allows a CHAR variable to be used in that regard:
<syntaxhighlight>
+
<syntaxhighlight lang=pascal>
 
var
 
var
 
   Loop: Char;
 
   Loop: Char;

Latest revision as of 07:58, 17 October 2023

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A char stores a single character and is currently one byte, and AnsiChar is an alias for it. However, in the future, char may become the same as a WideChar. For now, byte and char are almost identical - one byte (8-bits) in size. However, a char can only be used as a character, or as part of a string type, and cannot be used in an arithmetic expression, while a byte can only be referred to as a numeric type.

For example:

 var ch: char;
      c: byte; 

 begin
   ch := 'A';  c := 65;  { are the same action, and are legal }
   ch := 65;   c := 'A'; { while they are internally the same values, 
                           direct assignment between Chars and Bytes is illegal }
 end.

The use of char or byte as a data type provides better documentation as to the purpose of the use of the particular variable. The char type can be coerced to byte by using the ord function. Byte type values can be coerced to char by using the chr function.

type chars functions follows the ASCII.

The above program corrected to legal use:

 var ch: char;
      c: byte; 

 begin
    ch := 'A';      c := 65;        { are the same action, and are legal }
    ch := chr(65);  c := ord('A');  { now legal }
    ch := Char(65); c := Byte('A'); { also legal and guaranteed to happen at compile time }
 end.

A FOR loop control variable can be any enumerable (capable of being put into one-to-one correspondence with the positive integers) which allows a CHAR variable to be used in that regard:

var
   Loop: Char;

begin
  for Loop := 'a' to 'c' do WriteLn(Loop);
end.

See also


navigation bar: data types
simple data types

boolean byte cardinal char currency double dword extended int8 int16 int32 int64 integer longint real shortint single smallint pointer qword word

complex data types

array class object record set string shortstring