This version is out of date, covering development from v9.5.0 to v9.7.3. It is maintained here only for inbound reference links from elsewhere. It is no longer actively updated.

Jump to the current version of aTbRef

Tinderbox v9 Icon

Conditional statements using multiple arguments

If() conditional statements and queries may use more than one argument using logical joins. See AND and OR join syntax.


( A & B )

Reads: if condition A AND condition B are true, then this compound query is true.

Contrast this with the &= operator (below).


( A &= B )

Reads: result is true if condition A is currently true and, if so, if condition B is also true.

Thus, if condition A is false, condition B is not checked and the overall result is false. Thus in some cases only condition A is evaluated.

By comparison, with a ( A & B ) query both condition A and condition B are are always evaluated.


( A | B )

Reads: if condition A OR condition B is true, then this compound query is true.

Contrast this with the |= operator (below).


( A |= B )

Reads: result is true if condition A is currently true or, if so if condition B is true.

Thus, if condition A is false, condition B is not checked and the overall result is false. Thus in some cases only condition A is evaluated.

By comparison, with a ( A | B ) query both condition A and condition B are are always evaluated.


(A | B) & ( C | ( D | E ) )

This is a more complex example of logical joins. Reads: if (condition A OR condition B is true) AND (condition C OR (either condition D OR condition E are true)), then this compound query is true.