CodeVariableDeclarationStatement Class
Assembly: System (in system.dll)
'Declaration <SerializableAttribute> _ <ComVisibleAttribute(True)> _ <ClassInterfaceAttribute(ClassInterfaceType.AutoDispatch)> _ Public Class CodeVariableDeclarationStatement Inherits CodeStatement 'Usage Dim instance As CodeVariableDeclarationStatement
/** @attribute SerializableAttribute() */ /** @attribute ComVisibleAttribute(true) */ /** @attribute ClassInterfaceAttribute(ClassInterfaceType.AutoDispatch) */ public class CodeVariableDeclarationStatement extends CodeStatement
SerializableAttribute ComVisibleAttribute(true) ClassInterfaceAttribute(ClassInterfaceType.AutoDispatch) public class CodeVariableDeclarationStatement extends CodeStatement
Not applicable.
CodeVariableDeclarationStatement can be used to represent code that declares a variable.
The Type property specifies the type of the variable to declare. The Name property specifies the name of the variable to declare. The InitExpression property is optional, and specifies an initialization expression to assign to the variable after it is created.
Note: |
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| Some languages can implement the optional variable initialization expression by making a separate assignment statement after the variable declaration. |
This example demonstrates using a CodeVariableDeclarationStatement to declare a variable.
Dim variableDeclaration As New CodeVariableDeclarationStatement( _ GetType(String), "TestString", _ New CodePrimitiveExpression("Testing")) ' The first two parameters indicate the type and name of the variable to declare. ' The optional initExpression parameter initializes the variable. ' A Visual Basic code generator produces the following source code for the preceeding example code: ' Dim TestString As String = "Testing"
CodeVariableDeclarationStatement variableDeclaration =
new CodeVariableDeclarationStatement(
// Type of the variable to declare.
String.class.ToType(),
// Name of the variable to declare.
"TestString",
// Optional initExpression parameter initializes the variable.
new CodePrimitiveExpression("Testing"));
// A VJ# code generator produces the following source code for the
// preceeding example code:
// String testString = "Testing";
System.CodeDom.CodeObject
System.CodeDom.CodeStatement
System.CodeDom.CodeVariableDeclarationStatement
Windows 98, Windows Server 2000 SP4, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows Server 2003, Windows XP Media Center Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Starter Edition
The Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0 is supported on Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows XP SP2, and Windows Server 2003 SP1.
Note: