On 30 May 2007 18:12, Andreas Schwab wrote:

> "Dave Korn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
>> On 30 May 2007 18:05, Andreas Schwab wrote:
>> 
>>> Lothar Werzinger writes:
>>> 
>>>> Eyal Lebedinsky wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> I see two kinds of warnings:
>>>>> warning: logical '||' with non-zero constant will always evaluate as
>>>>> true warning: logical '&&' with non-zero constant will always evaluate
>>>>> as true 
>>>>> 
>>>>> The first statement is true, the second false. It can say (if the case
>>>>> is such) warning: logical '&&' with zero constant will always evaluate
>>>>> as false and even warn of warning: logical '&&' with non-zero constant
>>>>> will have no effect
>>>> 
>>>> That depends, if the non-zero constant is the LHS of the && operator the
>>>> warning is IMHO correct.
>>> 
>>> 1 && 0 is still 0.
>> 
>>   But the 0 will never be evaluated.
> 
> Sure it will.

  Yeh, I misread it, sorry.

    cheers,
      DaveK
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