A verb for what you do when you have A and do A AND B

Well, this may seem like a silly question, but it seriously erodes me. Hoping some programmer has a good word for that!

Thing is, I am creating an ExpressionBuilder class to help me create expressions for use with LinqToSQL. And my problem is how the word itself when describing two methods. And for me this is also a problem when I talk about it. Here is the problem:

Do you have Expression<Func<T, bool>>, A. You get another one later B. Now you combine this Bwith Ausing &&/ AndAlsoor ||/ OrElse. For example, for example:

A = A && B;

Good. So what did you do there? What is the verb for what you did from B to A? If you think in a series of such things, for example A = A && B && C && D && E && ..., you can say that then added Fto this series. But that would not be entirely correct, I feel ...

What I feed would be the most "correct", so this is what you take B, and you "and" this is a / c A. You take Band you "or" his / s A. But can "and" and "or" be used as a verb? This is normal? It feels incredibly bad English ... but maybe this is normal in a programming environment? Or?

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, "" . A B. - AND OR. XOR, , , XOR'd -, .

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.

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(, /), " "

(, ), : " "

... ... " Push"

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A B?

, "" ""

, , , , , "cat" .

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, . , , , .. , !

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Set Notation (Venn Diagrams).

  • : A B
  • : B

http://www.purplemath.com/modules/venndiag2.htm

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Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/1707033/


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