>>>>>Take a look here
>>>>>
http://blogs.lessthandot.com/index.php/DesktopDev/MSTech/andalso-and-orelse>>>>
>>>>Yes, but in the example I gave, And would have done it as well, correct?
>>>
>>>If the first condition is false, we don't need to evaluate the second. AndAlso only evaluates the second condition if the first is true. According to the linked article, both conditions will be evaluated if you used And. In other words, it seems we always want to use AndAlso in VB.NET instead of And
>>
>>Not *always* :-}
>>Consider:
Dim i As Integer = 0
>>While True
>> If (i > 10) AndAlso (System.Math.Max(System.Threading.Interlocked.Increment(i),i - 1) > 10) Then
>> Exit While
>> End If
>>End While
>
>:) Not considering such wicked samples, of course.
I know - just being difficult.
Same principle applies to 'Or' and 'OrElse' of course.....