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Home/ Questions/Q 6164685
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T22:02:07+00:00 2026-05-23T22:02:07+00:00

This should be an easy one for folks. Google’s got nothing except content farms

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This should be an easy one for folks. Google’s got nothing except content farms linking to one blurb, and that’s written in broken English. So let’s get this cleared up here where it’ll be entombed for all time.

What’s the trailing ampersand on VB hexadecimal numbers for? I’ve read it forces conversion to an Int32 on the chance VB wants to try and store as an Int16. That makes sense to me. But the part I didn’t get from the blurb was to always use the trailing ampersand for bitmasks, flags, enums, etc. Apparantly, it has something to do with overriding VB’s fetish for using signed numbers for things internally, which can lead to weird results in comparisons.

So to get easy points, what are the rules for VB.Net hexadecimal numbers, with and without the trailing ampersand? Please include the specific usage in the case of bitmasks/flags and such, and how one would also use it to force signed vs. unsigned.

No C# please 🙂

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T22:02:07+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 10:02 pm

    Visual Basic has the concept of Type Characters. These can be used to modify variable declarations and literals, although I’d not recommend using them in variable declarations – most developers are more familiar these days with As. E.g. the following declarations are equivalent:

    Dim X&
    Dim X As Long
    

    But personally, I find the second more readable. If I saw the first, I’d actually have to go visit the link above, or use Intellisense, to work out what the variable is (not good if looking at the code on paper).

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