And
is bitwise. AndAlso
is boolean.
Correctness wise, if we disregard short-circuting, And
can always be used in all cases where AndAlso
can be used (unless you get creative), but the other way round is not true.
That is, And
is a "universal" operator that will "do the right thing" in both the bitwise and logical contexts, but is not optimized for either. AndAlso
can only be used in the boolean context, but it is optimized for it.
Visual Basic did not use to have AndAlso
, so And
was the only choice. Now that VB has AndAlso
, And
should may be used for:
- bitwise math (performing the bitwise AND over two numbers)
- expressions with side effects (you want to disable short-circuiting and have both parts of the expression always evaluated). I would certainly not call this a recommended practice, because you might end up with very unobvious code, but it is probably okay if you have legacy code upgraded from VB6.