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I am working with some old code and it defines a global variable like this...

Public myvar

This variable is never assigned a value, but is later used in a test...

If myvar <> somevalue then
    'do something
End If

For what values of somevalue would that something be done?

2 Answers 2

8
  • The default value is Empty.
  • "Something will be done" for any value except Empty, 0 or ""...
    • ... for the value Nothing, the code will raise an error and "something will not be done".

From the VB6 documentation

When variables are initialized, a numeric variable is initialized to 0, a variable-length string is initialized to a zero-length string (""), and a fixed-length string is filled with zeros. Variant variables are initialized to Empty. Each element of a user-defined type variable is initialized as if it were a separate variable.

4
  • 1
    If memory serves, the code above will crash if someValue is assigned a value of Nothing, or is an object whose default property yields Nothing, etc. since the not-equals operator would compare notice that the type of someValue is Object, try to fetch its default property, and then try to compare that (fetching <i>its</i> default property if need be, etc.) Since trying to get the default property of Nothing will fail, the code will crash.
    – supercat
    Nov 21, 2012 at 19:18
  • @supercat question says "This variable is never assigned a value". Therefore since this is VB6 it will contain Empty (different from Nothing). Therefore "Something will be done" for any somevalue except Empty, 0 or ""
    – MarkJ
    Nov 21, 2012 at 20:15
  • The question presupposes that myVar is never assigned a value and asks for what values of someValue the indicated statement will execute. I'm not sure what will happen if On Error Resume Next is in effect, but if it isn't I'm pretty certain that the do something code will not execute when someValue is Nothing.
    – supercat
    Nov 21, 2012 at 20:30
  • Oh! Now I've read your first comment properly. Yes, you are probably right. I edited my answer accordingly.
    – MarkJ
    Nov 21, 2012 at 20:32
4

From Get the most out of Variants in VB6 I would make an assumption that if myvar is not "" then do something. I am not sure and can't check it right now but you can check it yourself.

When a Variant has been declared but not assigned a value, it contains the special value Empty. You can test for this with the IsEmpty function
...
If an empty Variant is used in an expression, it will evaluate as either the value 0 or an empty string depending on the expression.

1
  • +1 for the reminder that an Empty variant will be coerced to a string as "" or a number as 0
    – MarkJ
    Nov 26, 2010 at 10:12

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