2 comments

  • User Avatar
    [deleted]
    Sunday, Nov 30 2014

    Either or means you can have both, you just need to make sure you have one of them

    0
  • Friday, Nov 28 2014

    Or else? Like A or B or else C?

    I don't think that or else has ever been specifically mentioned, but I could be wrong?

    If it's "not both"

    Then it is A --> /B

    or B --> /A

    Meaning that the minimum out of the two could be 0, and the max could be 1 - either A or B, but both of them cannot be in.

    Or else... sound like A, or B, or C.... which would be just one of the three I think....

    0

Confirm action

Are you sure?