1.9 KiB
1.9 KiB
title
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| Short-Circuit Evaluation |
Short-Circuit Evaluation
The Short-Circuit evaluation consists in checking or executing the second argument only if the first argument is not enough to determine the value of the expression.
You can do a short-circuit evaluation with && and || operators.
Example with && Operator
canOpenFile(filename) && openFile(filename); // If you can open the file then open it.
The example above is equivalent to:
if ( canOpenFile(filename) ) {
openFile(filename);
}
Example with || Operator
isServerOn || startServer(); // If the server is not on then start it.
The example above is equivalent to:
if ( !isServerOn ) {
startServer();
}
A Real-World Example with || Operator
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
char *getName();
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
// Get the first argument passed via terminal
char *name = argv[1];
// If the name is not passed via terminal, then print a message and then get the name
name || printf("Please give me your name:") && (name = getName());
printf("Hello %s\n", name);
}
char *getName() {
// Allocate memory
char *name = (char*)malloc(30);
scanf("%s", name);
return name;
}
Example with Nested if Statements
int i, j;
scanf ( "%d %d", &i, &j );
if ( i > 10 && j > 10 ) {
printf("Both numbers are greater than 10! \n");
}
The above example is equivalent to:
int i, j;
scanf ( "%d %d", &i, &j );
if ( i > 10 ) {
if ( j > 10 ) {
printf("Both numbers are greater than 10! \n");
}
}
Notice when if ( i > 10 ) fails, the statement is false and the check if ( j > 10 ) is never run. if ( i > 10 && j > 10 ) behaves exactly the same way, because if i > 10 is false then the entire statement is automatically false, and there is no need to run an additional check.