Lect8-C-Operators
Lect8-C-Operators
An operator is a symbol that tells the compiler to perform specific mathematical or logical
functions. C language is rich in built-in operators and provides the following types of
operators −
Arithmetic Operators
Relational Operators
Logical Operators
Bitwise Operators
Assignment Operators
Misc Operators
We will, in this chapter, look into the way each operator works.
Arithmetic Operators
The following table shows all the arithmetic operators supported by the C language.
Assume variable A holds 10 and variable B holds 20 then −
Show Examples
Relational Operators
The following table shows all the relational operators supported by C. Assume
variable A holds 10 and variable B holds 20 then −
Show Examples
Operator Description Example
== Checks if the values of two operands are equal or not. If yes, then the condition (A == B)
becomes true. is not
true.
!= Checks if the values of two operands are equal or not. If the values are not (A != B)
equal, then the condition becomes true. is true.
> Checks if the value of left operand is greater than the value of right operand. If (A > B)
yes, then the condition becomes true. is not
true.
< Checks if the value of left operand is less than the value of right operand. If yes, (A < B)
then the condition becomes true. is true.
>= Checks if the value of left operand is greater than or equal to the value of right (A >= B)
operand. If yes, then the condition becomes true. is not
true.
<= Checks if the value of left operand is less than or equal to the value of right (A <= B)
operand. If yes, then the condition becomes true. is true.
Logical Operators
Following table shows all the logical operators supported by C language. Assume
variable A holds 1 and variable B holds 0, then −
Show Examples
&& Called Logical AND operator. If both the operands are non-zero, then the (A && B)
condition becomes true. is false.
|| Called Logical OR Operator. If any of the two operands is non-zero, then the (A || B) is
condition becomes true. true.
! Called Logical NOT Operator. It is used to reverse the logical state of its !(A &&
operand. If a condition is true, then Logical NOT operator will make it false. B) is
true.
Bitwise Operators
Bitwise operator works on bits and perform bit-by-bit operation. The truth tables for &, |,
and ^ is as follows −
0 0 0 0 0
0 1 0 1 1
1 1 1 1 0
1 0 0 1 1
& Binary AND Operator copies a bit to the result if it exists (A & B) = 12, i.e., 0000 1100
in both operands.
| Binary OR Operator copies a bit if it exists in either (A | B) = 61, i.e., 0011 1101
operand.
^ Binary XOR Operator copies the bit if it is set in one (A ^ B) = 49, i.e., 0011 0001
operand but not both.
~ Binary One's Complement Operator is unary and has the (~A ) = ~(60), i.e,. -0111101
effect of 'flipping' bits.
Assignment Operators
The following table lists the assignment operators supported by the C language −
Show Examples
= Simple assignment operator. Assigns values from right C = A + B will assign the value
side operands to left side operand of A + B to C
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.
Operators Precedence in C
Operator precedence determines the grouping of terms in an expression and decides
how an expression is evaluated. Certain operators have higher precedence than others;
for example, the multiplication operator has a higher precedence than the addition
operator.
For example, x = 7 + 3 * 2; here, x is assigned 13, not 20 because operator * has a higher
precedence than +, so it first gets multiplied with 3*2 and then adds into 7.
Here, operators with the highest precedence appear at the top of the table, those with
the lowest appear at the bottom. Within an expression, higher precedence operators will
be evaluated first.
Show Examples
Category Operator Associativity