Part 1 of the second session of Algorithmics and Programming course covering basic types, operators and expressions For more information, check www.antoun.me/i1101.php
Hello Dr., at 52:51, I think there is a little mistake. You said that if we have 0 "OR" (||) something else, then this directly gives a 0. Shouldn't we analyze the statement !(32>12) first? the reason it gives a 0 is because !(32>12) is false. !(32>12) is false as the negation of 32>12, is the statement 32