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My Calculator Broke


Best Answer TeamFX , 09 February 2014 - 04:36 PM

Yes, if you want to match strings, you normally use Not StrCmp(...) or StrCmp(...)=0
Results less or greater than zero are useful for creating an alphabetical index as they indicate whether a string appears before or after a specifc word. Go to the full post


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#1 somebody1234

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Posted 09 February 2014 - 07:24 AM

The StrCmp( command is not working.
It was working the last time I tried.
Does anyone know what happened?
EDIT: When the strings match, StrCmp( outputs 0. Is this meant to happen?

Edited by somebody1234, 09 February 2014 - 11:40 AM.


#2 TeamFX

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Posted 09 February 2014 - 04:36 PM   Best Answer

Yes, if you want to match strings, you normally use Not StrCmp(...) or StrCmp(...)=0
Results less or greater than zero are useful for creating an alphabetical index as they indicate whether a string appears before or after a specifc word.

#3 Krtyski

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Posted 12 February 2014 - 06:02 AM

When the retuen of StrCmp is 0, it means FALSE. If it's not 0 that means TRUE.


If StrCmp(...)
Then
[process in case of TRUE]
Else
[process in case of FALSE]
IfEnd




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