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	title
| title | 
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| Operators | 
Operators in C
1. Arithmetic Operators
- +Adds to operands (values)- int a = 6; int c = a + 1; // c = 7
- -Subtracts the second operand from the first- int a = 8; int b = 9; int c = a - b; // c = -1
- *Multiplies two operands- int a = 8; int b = 9; int c = a * b; // c = 72
- /Divides the first operand by the second- int a = 8; int b = 4; int c = a / b; // c = 2
- %Gives the remainder after an integer division- int a = 8; int b = 9; int c = b % a; // c = 1 because b = 1*a + 1 = 8 + 1
- ++Increases int value by one- int a = 8; a++; // a = 9 int b = a++; // postfix operator; a = 10, b = 9 int c = ++a; // prefix operator; a = 11, c = 11
- --Decreases int value by one- int a = 8; a--; // a = 7 int b = a--; // postfix operator; a = 6, b = 7 int c = --a; // prefix operator; a = 5, c = 5
// C Program to demonstrate the working of arithmetic operators #include <stdio.h> int main() { int a = 9,b = 4, c;
c = a+b;
printf("a+b = %d \n",c);
c = a-b;
printf("a-b = %d \n",c);
c = a*b;
printf("a*b = %d \n",c);
c=a/b;
printf("a/b = %d \n",c);
c=a%b;
printf("Remainder when a divided by b = %d \n",c);
return 0;
}
2. Relational Operators
- ==Equal - true when the two operands are equal- int a = 5, b = 5; bool c = (a == b); // c = true
- !=Not equal - true when the two operands are NOT equal- int a = 5, b = 6; bool c = (a != b); // c = true
- >Greater than - True when first operand is bigger than the second.- int a = 8, b = 5; bool c = (a > b); // c = true
- <Less than - True when the first operand is smaller then the second.- int a = 5, b = 8; bool c = (a < b); // c = true
- >=Greater than or equal - True when the first operand is bigger, or equal to the second.- int a = 8, b = 5; bool c = (a >= b); // c = true bool d = (a >= 8); // d = true
- <=Less than or equal - True when the first operand is smaller or equal to the second.- int a = 5, b = 8; bool c = (a <= b); // c = true
3. Logical Operators
- &&AND operator - True when both of the operands are true.- bool c = (5 < 6) && (8!=7); // both operands true, therefore c = true
- ||OR operator - True when either the first or the second operands are true (or both)- bool c = (5 < 6) || (8 == 7) // first operand is true, therefore c = true
- !NOT operator - True when the operand is false.- bool c = !(8 == 7) // translate: NOT (false), therefore c = true
4. Bitwise Operators
- &AND operator - If at a place there is a bit in both operands, then it is copied to the result- A = 11001 B = 01000 RESULT = 01000
- |OR operator - If at a place there is a bit in either operands, then it is copied to the result- A = 11001 B = 01000 RESULT = 11001
- ^XOR (exclusive OR) operator - If at a place there is a bit in one of the operands (not both), then it is copied to the result- A = 11001 B = 01000 RESULT = 10001
- ~Negation operator - Reverses the bits. 1 -> 0, 0 -> 1- C = 01000 RESULT = 10111
- <<Left shift operator - The left operand is moved left by as many bits, as the right operand- A = 11001 A << 2 RESULT = 00100
- >>Right shift operator - The left operand is moved right by as many bits, as the right operand- A = 11001 A >> 2 RESULT = 00110
5. Assignment Operators
- =- int a = 7; // 'a' is going to be equal to 7
- +=- int a = 7; a += 5; // equivalent to a = a + 5 = 7 + 5 = 12
- -=- int a = 7; a -= 2; // equivalent to a = a - 2 = 7 - 2 = 5
- *=- int a = 7; a *= 3; // equivalent to a = a * 3 = 7 * 3 = 21
- /=- int a = 21; a /= 3; // equivalent to a = a / 3 = 21 / 3 = 7
- %=- int a = 21; a %= 5; // equivalent to a = a % 5 = 21 % 5 = 1
Misc Operators ↦ sizeof & ternary Besides the operators discussed above, there are a few other important operators including sizeof and ? : supported by the C Language.
Operator Description Example sizeof() Returns the size of a variable. sizeof(a), where a is integer, will return 4. & Returns the address of a variable. &a; returns the actual address of the variable.
- 
Pointer to a variable. *a;
? : Conditional Expression. If Condition is true ? then value X : otherwise value Y
6. Operator precedence in C
Operators with the highest precedence appear at the top of the list. Within an expression, operators with higher precedence will be evaluated first.
- Postfix () [] -> . ++ --
- Unary + - ! ~ ++ -- (type)* & sizeof
- Multiplicative * / %
- Additive + -
- Shift << >>
- Relational < <= > >=
- Equality == !=
- Bitwise AND &
- Bitwise XOR ^
- Bitwise OR |
- Logical AND &&
- Logical OR ||
- Conditional ?:
- Assignment = += -= *= /= %= >>= <<= &= ^= |=
- Comma ,