If you have long variablenames and would end up with:
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.FirstName="Stefan"
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.LastName="Karlsson"
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.Age="39"
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.Sex="Male"
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.Occupation="Programmer"
UserHandler.GetUser.First.User.UserID="0"
....and so on
then I would use WITH to make it more readable:
With UserHandler.GetUser.First.User
.FirstName="Stefan"
.LastName="Karlsson"
.Age="39"
.Sex="Male"
.Occupation="Programmer"
.UserID="0"
end with
In the later example there are even performance benefit over the first example because in the first example Im fetching the user every time I access a user property and in the WITH-case I only fetch the user one time.
I can get the performance gain without using with, like this:
dim myuser as user =UserHandler.GetUser.First.User
myuser.FirstName="Stefan"
myuser.LastName="Karlsson"
myuser.Age="39"
myuser.Sex="Male"
myuser.Occupation="Programmer"
myuser.UserID="0"
But I would go for the WITH statement instead, it looks cleaner.
And I just took this as an example so dont complain over a class with many keywords, another example could be like: WITH RefundDialog.RefundDatagridView.SelectedRows(0)
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