OPC Studio User's Guide and Reference
Inequality Operator (BrowsePath)



OpcLabs.BaseLib Assembly > OpcLabs.BaseLib.Navigation Namespace > BrowsePath Class : Inequality Operator
First object to be compared.

Because the BrowsePath has an implicit conversion from System.String, in languages that support implicit conversion operators (such as C# or VB.NET), you can simply use a string (containing an absolute browse path to be parsed) in place of this parameter, and the corresponding browse path object will be constructed automatically. When the implicit conversion operators are not supported (such as with Python.NET), you can use the FromString static method instead. CAUTION: Parsing the browse path can throw OpcLabs.BaseLib.Navigation.Parsing.BrowsePathFormatException.

The value of this parameter can be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

Second object to be compared.

Because the BrowsePath has an implicit conversion from System.String, in languages that support implicit conversion operators (such as C# or VB.NET), you can simply use a string (containing an absolute browse path to be parsed) in place of this parameter, and the corresponding browse path object will be constructed automatically. When the implicit conversion operators are not supported (such as with Python.NET), you can use the FromString static method instead. CAUTION: Parsing the browse path can throw OpcLabs.BaseLib.Navigation.Parsing.BrowsePathFormatException.

The value of this parameter can be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

Determines whether the two objects are not equal.
Syntax
'Declaration
 
<PureAttribute()>
Public Operator <>( _
   ByVal left As BrowsePath, _
   ByVal right As BrowsePath _
) As Boolean
'Usage
 
[Pure()]
public bool operator !=( 
   BrowsePath left,
   BrowsePath right
)
[Pure()]
public:
bool operator !=( 
   BrowsePath^ left,
   BrowsePath^ right
)

Parameters

left
First object to be compared.

Because the BrowsePath has an implicit conversion from System.String, in languages that support implicit conversion operators (such as C# or VB.NET), you can simply use a string (containing an absolute browse path to be parsed) in place of this parameter, and the corresponding browse path object will be constructed automatically. When the implicit conversion operators are not supported (such as with Python.NET), you can use the FromString static method instead. CAUTION: Parsing the browse path can throw OpcLabs.BaseLib.Navigation.Parsing.BrowsePathFormatException.

The value of this parameter can be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

right
Second object to be compared.

Because the BrowsePath has an implicit conversion from System.String, in languages that support implicit conversion operators (such as C# or VB.NET), you can simply use a string (containing an absolute browse path to be parsed) in place of this parameter, and the corresponding browse path object will be constructed automatically. When the implicit conversion operators are not supported (such as with Python.NET), you can use the FromString static method instead. CAUTION: Parsing the browse path can throw OpcLabs.BaseLib.Navigation.Parsing.BrowsePathFormatException.

The value of this parameter can be null (Nothing in Visual Basic).

Return Value

True if the objects are not equal; false if they are equal.
Remarks

This method is pure, i.e. it does not have observable side effects.

This method or property does not throw any exceptions, aside from execution exceptions such as System.Threading.ThreadAbortException or System.OutOfMemoryException.

Requirements

Target Platforms: .NET Framework: Windows 10 (selected versions), Windows 11 (selected versions), Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2022; .NET: Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows

See Also