Difference between revisions of "Csharp programming syntax"
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Multiplication: *<br> | Multiplication: *<br> | ||
Division: /<br> | Division: /<br> | ||
− | Add to existing: +=<br> | + | Add to existing: += example: x += y is equivalent to x = x + y<br> |
− | Subtract from existing: -=<br> | + | Subtract from existing: -= example: x -= y is equivalent to x = x - y<br> |
Revision as of 03:49, 23 December 2010
What follows is a basic look at the C# programming language.
C# is a strongly typed language. That means that the variable type matters. You cannot assign a variable of one type to another of a different type without performing a type cast. C# is compiled into IL code that is then compiled just in time by the .NET framework. The .NET framework handles things like program execution and memory management. As a result C# is considered "managed code." C# is case sensitive so Var1 is different from var1.
Basic Syntax
White Space and Comments
C# uses the ; to terminate statements. As a result statements can have whitespace formatting characters(tabs, line feeds, carriage returns, etc.).
Example:
//This is a comment and will not execute
CallSomeFunction(param1, param2, param3);
is the same as:
//This is a comment and will not execute
CallSomefunction(param1, :param2, :param3);
Variable Declaration
//value types can be initialized upon instantiation
[scope] Type name = value;
//reference types can be initialized up instantiation
[scope] Type name = new Type(contructor params);
//or not
[scope] Type name = null;
Value Type Example:
private int myInt = 0;
Reference Type Example:
private string myNewString = "fred"; string myNewString = null;
Operators
Assignment Operator: =
Equality Operator: ==
OR Operator: ||
AND Operator: &&
Addition: +
Subtraction: -
Multiplication: *
Division: /
Add to existing: += example: x += y is equivalent to x = x + y
Subtract from existing: -= example: x -= y is equivalent to x = x - y