TimeSpan.op_UnaryPlus-Methode
Gibt die angegebene Instanz von TimeSpan zurück.
Namespace: System
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Shared Operator + ( _
t As TimeSpan _
) As TimeSpan
'Usage
Dim t As TimeSpan
Dim returnValue As TimeSpan
returnValue = +t
public static TimeSpan operator + (
TimeSpan t
)
public:
static TimeSpan operator + (
TimeSpan t
)
J# unterstützt keine überladenen Operatoren.
JScript unterstützt die Verwendung von überladenen Operatoren, aber nicht die Deklaration von neuen überladenen Operatoren.
Parameter
- t
Eine TimeSpan.
Rückgabewert
Gibt t zurück.
Beispiel
Im folgenden Codebeispiel wird der Unary Plus-Operator auf verschiedene TimeSpan-Objekte angewendet.
' Example of the TimeSpan.Duration( ) and TimeSpan.Negate( ) methods,
' and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators.
Imports System
Imports Microsoft.VisualBasic
Module DuraNegaUnaryDemo
Const dataFmt As String = "{0,22}{1,22}{2,22}"
Sub ShowDurationNegate( interval As TimeSpan )
' Display the TimeSpan value and the results of the
' Duration and Negate methods.
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt, _
interval, interval.Duration( ), interval.Negate( ) )
End Sub
Sub Main( )
Console.WriteLine( _
"This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), " & _
"TimeSpan.Negate( ), " & vbCrLf & _
"and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and " & _
"Unary Plus operators " & vbCrLf & _
"generates the following output." & vbCrLf )
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt, _
"TimeSpan", "Duration( )", "Negate( )" )
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt, _
"--------", "-----------", "---------" )
' Create TimeSpan objects and apply the Unary Negation
' and Unary Plus operators to them.
ShowDurationNegate( new TimeSpan( 1 ) )
ShowDurationNegate( new TimeSpan( -1234567 ) )
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan.op_UnaryPlus( _
new TimeSpan( 0, 0, 10, -20, -30 ) ) )
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan.op_UnaryPlus( _
new TimeSpan( 0, -10, 20, -30, 40 ) ) )
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan.op_UnaryNegation( _
new TimeSpan( 1, 10, 20, 40, 160 ) ) )
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan.op_UnaryNegation( _
new TimeSpan( -10, -20, -30, -40, -50 ) ) )
End Sub
End Module
' This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), TimeSpan.Negate( ),
' and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators
' generates the following output.
'
' TimeSpan Duration( ) Negate( )
' -------- ----------- ---------
' 00:00:00.0000001 00:00:00.0000001 -00:00:00.0000001
' -00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567
' 00:09:39.9700000 00:09:39.9700000 -00:09:39.9700000
' -09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000
' -1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000
' 10.20:30:40.0500000 10.20:30:40.0500000 -10.20:30:40.0500000
// Example of the TimeSpan.Duration( ) and TimeSpan.Negate( ) methods,
// and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators.
using System;
class DuraNegaUnaryDemo
{
const string dataFmt = "{0,22}{1,22}{2,22}" ;
static void ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan interval )
{
// Display the TimeSpan value and the results of the
// Duration and Negate methods.
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt,
interval, interval.Duration( ), interval.Negate( ) );
}
static void Main()
{
Console.WriteLine(
"This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), " +
"TimeSpan.Negate( ), \nand the TimeSpan Unary " +
"Negation and Unary Plus operators \n" +
"generates the following output.\n" );
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt,
"TimeSpan", "Duration( )", "Negate( )" );
Console.WriteLine( dataFmt,
"--------", "-----------", "---------" );
// Create TimeSpan objects and apply the Unary Negation
// and Unary Plus operators to them.
ShowDurationNegate( new TimeSpan( 1 ) );
ShowDurationNegate( new TimeSpan( -1234567 ) );
ShowDurationNegate(
+ new TimeSpan( 0, 0, 10, -20, -30 ) );
ShowDurationNegate(
+ new TimeSpan( 0, -10, 20, -30, 40 ) );
ShowDurationNegate(
- new TimeSpan( 1, 10, 20, 40, 160 ) );
ShowDurationNegate(
- new TimeSpan( -10, -20, -30, -40, -50 ) );
}
}
/*
This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), TimeSpan.Negate( ),
and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators
generates the following output.
TimeSpan Duration( ) Negate( )
-------- ----------- ---------
00:00:00.0000001 00:00:00.0000001 -00:00:00.0000001
-00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567
00:09:39.9700000 00:09:39.9700000 -00:09:39.9700000
-09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000
-1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000
10.20:30:40.0500000 10.20:30:40.0500000 -10.20:30:40.0500000
*/
// Example of the TimeSpan::Duration( ) and TimeSpan::Negate( ) methods,
// and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators.
using namespace System;
const __wchar_t * protoFmt = L"{0,22}{1,22}{2,22}";
void ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan interval )
{
// Display the TimeSpan value and the results of the
// Duration and Negate methods.
Console::WriteLine( gcnew String( protoFmt ), interval, interval.Duration(), interval.Negate() );
}
int main()
{
Console::WriteLine( "This example of TimeSpan::Duration( ), "
"TimeSpan::Negate( ), \nand the TimeSpan Unary "
"Negation and Unary Plus operators \n"
"generates the following output.\n" );
Console::WriteLine( gcnew String( protoFmt ), "TimeSpan", "Duration( )", "Negate( )" );
Console::WriteLine( gcnew String( protoFmt ), "--------", "-----------", "---------" );
// Create TimeSpan objects and apply the Unary Negation
// and Unary Plus operators to them.
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan(1) );
ShowDurationNegate( TimeSpan( -1234567) );
ShowDurationNegate( +TimeSpan(0,0,10,-20,-30) );
ShowDurationNegate( +TimeSpan(0,-10,20,-30,40) );
ShowDurationNegate( -TimeSpan(1,10,20,40,160) );
ShowDurationNegate( -TimeSpan( -10,-20,-30,-40,-50) );
}
/*
This example of TimeSpan::Duration( ), TimeSpan::Negate( ),
and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators
generates the following output.
TimeSpan Duration( ) Negate( )
-------- ----------- ---------
00:00:00.0000001 00:00:00.0000001 -00:00:00.0000001
-00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567
00:09:39.9700000 00:09:39.9700000 -00:09:39.9700000
-09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000
-1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000
10.20:30:40.0500000 10.20:30:40.0500000 -10.20:30:40.0500000
*/
// Example of the TimeSpan.Duration( ) and TimeSpan.Negate( ) methods,
// and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators.
import System.*;
class DuraNegaUnaryDemo
{
private static String dataFmt = "{0,22}{1,22}{2,22}";
static void ShowDurationNegate(TimeSpan interval)
{
// Display the TimeSpan value and the results of the
// Duration and Negate methods.
Console.WriteLine(dataFmt, interval, interval.Duration(),
interval.Negate());
} //ShowDurationNegate
public static void main(String[] args)
{
Console.WriteLine(("This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), "
+ "TimeSpan.Negate( ), \nand the TimeSpan Unary "
+ "Negation and Unary Plus operators \n"
+ "generates the following output.\n"));
Console.WriteLine(dataFmt, "TimeSpan", "Duration( )", "Negate( )");
Console.WriteLine(dataFmt, "--------", "-----------", "---------");
// Create TimeSpan objects and apply the Unary Negation
// and Unary Plus operators to them.
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(1));
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(-1234567));
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(0, 0, 10, -20, -30));
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(0, -10, 20, -30, 40));
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(1, 10, 20, 40, 160).Negate());
ShowDurationNegate(new TimeSpan(-10, -20, -30, -40, -50).Negate());
} //main
} //DuraNegaUnaryDemo
/*
This example of TimeSpan.Duration( ), TimeSpan.Negate( ),
and the TimeSpan Unary Negation and Unary Plus operators
generates the following output.
TimeSpan Duration( ) Negate( )
-------- ----------- ---------
00:00:00.0000001 00:00:00.0000001 -00:00:00.0000001
-00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567 00:00:00.1234567
00:09:39.9700000 00:09:39.9700000 -00:09:39.9700000
-09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000 09:40:29.9600000
-1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000 1.10:20:40.1600000
10.20:30:40.0500000 10.20:30:40.0500000 -10.20:30:40.0500000
*/
Plattformen
Windows 98, Windows 2000 SP4, Windows CE, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows Mobile für Pocket PC, Windows Mobile für Smartphone, Windows Server 2003, Windows XP Media Center Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Starter Edition
.NET Framework unterstützt nicht alle Versionen sämtlicher Plattformen. Eine Liste der unterstützten Versionen finden Sie unter Systemanforderungen.
Versionsinformationen
.NET Framework
Unterstützt in: 2.0, 1.1, 1.0