Quick Start Guide: Difference between revisions

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Notice that we only need one branch label instead of a program written using the line numbered style which has a line number for each line of code.
Notice that we only need one branch label instead of a program written using the line numbered style which has a line number for each line of code.


Here is what the same program looks like in QBasic:
<source lang="lb" highlight="">
ask:
    input "What is your name?"; yourName$
    print "Nice to meet you, "; yourName$
    input "Ask again (Y/N)"; yn$
    if yn$ = "Y" or yn$ = "y" then ask
    print "Bye."
    end
</source>
==== More to come... ====
==== More to come... ====

Revision as of 23:52, 30 December 2023

Quick Start Guide

Liberty BASIC has some unique features that are not in other versions of BASIC. This section will explain these features.

Branch Labels

Many BASIC languages support line numbers, and Liberty BASIC also lets you use them, but it is really intended that the programmer use named branch labels instead.

Branch labels are letters and numbers surrounded by square brackets, for example: [exampleBranchLabel] or [letters123]

So, instead of using line numbers like so:

10 input "What is your name?"; yourName$
20 print "Nice to meet you, "; yourName$
30 input "Ask again (Y/N)"; yn$
40 if yn$ = "Y" or yn$ = "y" then 10
50 print "Bye."
60 end

The simplest example of this without line numbers is:

[ask]
    input "What is your name?"; yourName$
    print "Nice to meet you, "; yourName$
    input "Ask again (Y/N)"; yn$
    if yn$ = "Y" or yn$ = "y" then [ask]
    print "Bye."
    end

Notice that we only need one branch label instead of a program written using the line numbered style which has a line number for each line of code.

Here is what the same program looks like in QBasic:

ask:
    input "What is your name?"; yourName$
    print "Nice to meet you, "; yourName$
    input "Ask again (Y/N)"; yn$
    if yn$ = "Y" or yn$ = "y" then ask
    print "Bye."
    end

More to come...