In our daily life, we have to deal with many kinds of information and data . For example, we need to handle data like names, money, phone number, addresses, date, stock quotes and more. Similarly, in Visual Basic 2015, we need to deal with all sorts of data, some of them can be mathematically calculated while some are in the form of text or other non-numeric forms. In Visual Basic 2015, we can store the data as variables, constants or arrays. The values of the variables always change, just like the contents of a mailbox or the storage bin while the value of a constant remains the same throughout.
Visual Basic 2015 classifies information into two major data types, the numeric data types, and the non-numeric data type
In Visual Basic 2015, numeric data types are types of data comprises numbers that can be calculated mathematically. Some examples of numeric data types are examination marks, height, body weight, the number of students in a class, share values, the price of goods, monthly bills, fees, bus fares and more.
In Visual Basic 2015, we can divide numeric data into seven types based on the range of values they can store. Calculations that only involve round figures can use Integer or Long integer. On the other hand, data that require high precision calculation need to use single or double precision data types, they are also called floating point numbers. Besides that, for currency calculation, you can use the currency data types. Lastly, if even more precision is required we can use the decimal data types. These data types are summarized in Table 8.1
Type | Storage | Range of Values |
---|---|---|
Byte | 1 byte | 0 to 255 |
Integer | 2 bytes | -32,768 to 32,767 |
Long | 4 bytes | -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,648 |
Single | 4 bytes | -3.402823E+38 to -1.401298E-45 for negative values 1.401298E-45 to 3.402823E+38 for positive values. |
Double | 8 bytes | -1.79769313486232e+308 to -4.94065645841247E-324 for negative values 4.94065645841247E-324 to 1.79769313486232e+308 for positive values. |
Currency | 8 bytes | -922,337,203,685,477.5808 to 922,337,203,685,477.5807 |
Decimal | 12 bytes | +/- 79,228,162,514,264,337,593,543,950,335 if no decimal is use +/- 7.9228162514264337593543950335 (28 decimal places). |
In Visual Basic 2015, non-numeric data types are data that we cannot calculate them mathematically. The non-numeric data comprises text or string data types, the Date data types, the Boolean data types that store only two values (true or false), Object data type and Variant data type. We can summarize them in Table 8.2
Type | Storage | Range |
---|---|---|
String(fixed length) | Length of string | 1 to 65,400 characters |
String(variable length) | Length + 10 bytes | 0 to 2 billion characters |
Date | 8 bytes | January 1, 100 to December 31, 9999 |
Boolean | 2 bytes | True or False |
Object | 4 bytes | Any embedded object |
Variant(numeric) | 16 bytes | Any value as large as Double |
Variant(text) | Length+22 bytes | Same as variable-length string |
Literals are values that you assign to data. In some cases, we need to add a suffix behind a literal so that Visual Basic 2015 can handle the calculations more accurately. For example, we can use num=1.3089! for a single precision data type, num=1.3089# for a double precision data type, num=130890& to indicate long integer data type and num=1.3089@ to indicate currency data type. The suffixes are summarized in Table 8.3.
Suffix | Data Type |
---|---|
& | Long |
! | Single |
# | Double |
@ | Currency |
In addition, we need to enclose string literals within two quotations and date and time literals within two # sign. Strings can contain any characters, including numbers. The following are few examples:
memberName="Turban, John." TelNumber="1800-900-888-777" LastDay=#31-Dec-00# ExpTime=#12:00 am#
Copyright©2008 Dr.Liew Voon Kiong. All rights reserved |Contact|Privacy Policy