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It follows, therefore, that an or statement may be true even if ''both'' the operands have a value of one, and you don’t need that outrageous desecration of the English language, “[[and/or]]”. | It follows, therefore, that an or statement may be true even if ''both'' the operands have a value of one, and you don’t need that outrageous desecration of the English language, “[[and/or]]”. | ||
{{sa}} | |||
*[[And]] | *[[And]] | ||
*[[And/or]] | *[[And/or]] | ||
*[[Virgule]] | *[[Virgule]] | ||
{{c3|Conjunction|Egg|ISIA}} | {{c3|Conjunction|Egg|ISIA}} |
Revision as of 13:20, 2 October 2023
Towards more picturesque speech™
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“Or” is a logical operation which gives the value one if at least one operand has the value one, and otherwise gives a value of zero.
It follows, therefore, that an or statement may be true even if both the operands have a value of one, and you don’t need that outrageous desecration of the English language, “and/or”.