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Hi Barbara, Now I *know* I'm going to be set straight on this! However, never content to let the highest authority on a given subject leave a question unanswered <g>... Your example does not include the use of the =, <>, >, >=, <, <= operators. What if your example were thus: A AND B AND X < 10 According to the rules of Operation Precedence, the X < 10 should be evaluated before A AND B. Where am I going wrong on this? - Dan --- Barbara Morris <bmorris@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: <snip> > Dan, in the expression A AND B AND C, there are actually two AND > expressions: > A AND B > "value of A AND B" AND C > For the first one, if A is false, B isn't evaluated. For the second > one, if "value of A AND B" is false, C isn't evaluated. __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop! http://platinum.yahoo.com
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