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| Operators | 
Operators :
- Operators let you perform operations on your data.
- The data that is being operated on is called the operand .
- The different types of operators in C++ are :
- OPERANDS are the data on which the operator performs certain commands.
- Operators are of 3 types : unary(works on 1 operand), binary(works on 2 operands) , ternary(works on 3 operands).
1 The I/O operators -
- These operators allow you to direct input and output.
The Input oerator ">>"
is used to read data from standard input (the "cin" statement) .
##The Output operator "<<"##
is used to send output in the cout statement.
2 The Arithmetic operators -
- These operators allow you to perform basic arithmetic operations.
- The +operator adds the two operands.
- The -operator subtracts the two operands.
- The *operator multiplies the two operands.
- The /operator divides and gives the quotient of the two operands.
- The %operator divides and gives the remainder of the two operands. (Or, for the more mathematically inclined reader,a % bis essentially the result of "a mod b"
Example of using arithmetic operators :
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
       int a = 5; //1st operand
       int b = 10; //2nd operand
       
       cout << "+ operator " << a+b << "\n"; //Add
       cout << "- operator " << a-b << "\n"; //Subtract
       cout << "* operator " << a*b << "\n"; //Multiply
       cout << "/ operator " << b/a << "\n"; //Find Quotient
       cout << "modulus operator " << b%a << "\n"; //Find remainder
       
       return 0; 
}
OUTPUT :
+ operator 15
- operator -5
* operator 50
/ operator 2
modulus operator 0
The increment operator :
- ++is known as the increment operator. It increases the value of an integer variable by 1.
The 2 types of increment :
- Pre increment first increments the value and then uses it. Example : int a ; ++a;
- Post increment first uses the variable then increments it. Example : int b; b++;
The decrement operator :
- --is known as the decrement operator. It decreases the value of an integer variable by 1.
The 2 types of decrement :
- Pre decrement first decrements the value and then uses it. Example : int a ; --a;
- Post decrement first uses the variable then decrements it. Example : int b; b--;
Example of Increment and decrement operators :
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{ 
        int a = 3 ,b = 4;
  
         // INCREMENT
        cout<< "Value of int a PRE INCREMENTED : " << ++a << "\n";
        cout<< "Value of int b POST INCREMENTED : " << b++ << "\n";
        cout<< "Value of b is changed after using once : " << b << "\n";
  
         // DECREMENT
        cout << "\n"; //go to next line 
        a = 10; //Assigning a new value to a
        b = 10; //Assigning a new value to b
        cout << "Value of int a PRE DECREMENTED : " << --a << "\n";
        cout << "Value of int b POST DECREMENTED : " << b-- << "\n";
        cout << "Value of b is changed after using once : " << b << "\n";
        
        return 0;
}
OUTPUT :
Value of int a PRE INCREMENTED : 4
Value of int b POST INCREMENTED : 4
Value of b is changed after using once : 5
Value of int a PRE DECREMENTED : 9
Value of int b POST DECREMENTED : 10
Value of b is changed after using once : 9
3 : Relational Operators :
- 
These operators tell us the relation among 2 operands and return a boolean value(0 or 1). If the relation is truethen it results into 1 . If the realtion is false then it results into 0.
- 
The 6 relational operators are : - Less than <
- Greater than >
- Less than or equal to <=
- Greater than or equal to >=
- Equal to ==
- Not equal to !=
 
- Less than 
4 : Logical Operators :
- These operators combine expressions for logical operations . They are :
- Logical AND &&: Evaluates to true if both values are true .
- Logical OR ||: Evaluates to true if any value is true .
- Logical NOT !: If expression is true then !expression is false. This operator reverses the truth value and is a unary operator.
5. Ternary Operators :
The ?: operator is the ternary operator, or the conditional operator, becuase it can be used to substitute an if else statement, or even an if else if statement.
The syntax:
condition ? ValueIfTrue : ValueIfFalse . This expands to:
if(condition)
 ValueIfTrue;
else ValueIfFalse;
Calling ValueIfTrue a value is a bit wrong, since it need not be a number. Something like this:
condition ? FirstLevelTrueValue : ConditionIfFalse ? SecondLevelTrueValue : SecondLevelFalseValue  also works, and is interpreted as the following if else if statement:
if(condition)
 FirstLevelTrueValue;
else if(ConditionIfFalse)
 SecondLevelTrueValue;
else SecondLevelFalseValue;
Similarly, nested if statements can also be made using ternary operators.
Camper , You now know what tokens are. The next article will be about CONGRATULATIONS
Good Luck to all of you
Happy Coding ! :)
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