The inconspicuous punctuation marks play a major role in VB. Let's take a look at the following figures. You will be surprised ,,,
The semicolon after print indicates output in compact format. Only after next J and after next I do not have semicolons, the program will be split once it encounters, so the shape is generated.
There is nothing behind print. Every time a program runs a print program, a line is output, and several lines are output when the program runs a print loop.
Separated by commas (,). Each output item is displayed in the standard format. Every 14 columns are listed as an output area. The values of the expressions after the comma (,) are displayed in the next output area. Therefore, this figure is used.
For this, one is a semicolon and the other is a comma.
This is a semicolon and a comma, but the positions are different.
Note the differences between the four graphs ,,,,,