Visual Basic (Declaration) | |
---|---|
Public Operator =( _ ByVal left As AnnPoint, _ ByVal right As AnnPoint _ ) As Boolean |
Parameters
- left
- The AnnPoint structure on the left side of the equality operator.
- right
- The AnnPoint structure on the right side of the equality operator.
Return Value
This operator returns true if left and right have equal X and Y values; otherwise false.This example creates a point in inches, converts it to pixels and then makes sure the 2 points are still equal.
Visual Basic | Copy Code |
---|---|
Public Sub AnnPoint_OperatorEquals() ' set up a new unit converter with 96 DPI Dim converter As AnnUnitConverter = New AnnUnitConverter(96, 96) Dim inches As AnnPoint = New AnnPoint(1.5F, 2.0F, AnnUnit.Inch) Dim pixels As AnnPoint = New AnnPoint(inches.ConvertTo(converter, AnnUnit.Pixel).ToPointF(), AnnUnit.Pixel) ' should say true Dim s As String s = String.Format("Should say True: inches == pixels is {0}", AnnPoint.op_Equality(inches, pixels)) MessageBox.Show(s) ' should say false s = String.Format("Should say False: inches != pixels is {0}", AnnPoint.op_Inequality(inches, pixels)) MessageBox.Show(s) End Sub |
C# | Copy Code |
---|---|
public void AnnPoint_OperatorEquals() { // set up a new unit converter with 96 DPI AnnUnitConverter converter = new AnnUnitConverter(96, 96); AnnPoint inches = new AnnPoint(1.5F, 2f, AnnUnit.Inch); AnnPoint pixels = new AnnPoint(inches.ConvertTo(converter, AnnUnit.Pixel).ToPointF(), AnnUnit.Pixel); // should say true string s; s = string.Format("Should say True: inches == pixels is {0}", inches == pixels); MessageBox.Show(s); // should say false s = string.Format("Should say False: inches != pixels is {0}", inches != pixels); MessageBox.Show(s); } |
If the two points have different units, the comparison will be done after temporarily converting both to a common unit.
Target Platforms: Microsoft .NET Framework 2.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Server 2003 family, Windows Server 2008 family, Windows Vista, Windows 7