UInt32 Statement
Declares variables of UInt32 type. (unsigned 4-byte integer variable).
Syntax
UInt32 varName [(subscripts)] [, varName [(subscripts)]...]
Parameters
- varName
- Specify the variable name which the user wants to declare.
- Maximum element number of the array variable
- Optional. Dimensions of an array variable; up to 3 dimensions may be declared. The subscripts syntax is as follows Optional.
(ubound1, [ubound2], [ubound3])
ubound1, ubound2, ubound3 each specify the maximum upper bound for the associated dimension. The elements in each dimension of an array are numbered from 0 and the available number of array elements is the upper bound value + 1. When specifying the upper bound value, make sure the number of total elements is within the range shown below:- Local variable: 2,000
- Global Preserve variable: 4,000
- Global variable and module variable: 100,000
Description
UInt32 is used to declare variables as integer type. Integer variables can contain values from 0 to 4294967295. Local variables should be declared at the top of a function. Global and module variables must be declared outside functions.
See Also
Boolean, Byte, Double, Global, Int32, Int64, Integer, Long, Real, Short, String, UByte, UInt64, UShort
UInt32 Statement Example
The following example shows a simple program that declares some variables as integer type using UInt32.
Function uint32test
UInt32 A(10) 'Single dimension array of UInt32 type
UInt32 B(10, 10) 'Two dimension array of UInt32 type
UInt32 C(5, 5, 5) 'Three dimension array of UInt32 type
UInt32 var1, arrayvar(10)
Integer i
Print "Please enter an Integer Number"
Input var1
Print "The Integer variable var1 = ", var1
For i = 1 To 5
Print "Please enter an Integer Number"
Input arrayvar(i)
Print "Value Entered was ", arrayvar(i)
Next i
Fend