C Programming
C Programming Operators
Operators are the symbol which operates on value or a variable. For example: + is a operator to perform addition.
C programming language has wide range of operators to perform various operations. For better understanding of operators, these operators can be classified as:
Operators in C programming |
---|
Arithmetic Operators |
Increment and Decrement Operators |
Assignment Operators |
Relational Operators |
Logical Operators |
Conditional Operators |
Bitwise Operators |
Special Operators |
Arithmetic Operators
Operator | Meaning of Operator |
---|---|
+ | addition or unary plus |
- | subtraction or unary minus |
* | multiplication |
/ | division |
% | remainder after division( modulo division) |
Example of working of arithmetic operators
/* Program to demonstrate the working of arithmetic operators in C. */
#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;
}
a+b=13 a-b=5 a*b=36 a/b=2 Remainder when a divided by b=1
Explanation
Here, the operators +, - and * performed normally as you expected. In normal calculation,
9/4
equals to 2.25. But, the output is 2 in this program. It is because, a and b are both integers. So, the output is also integer and the compiler neglects the term after decimal point and shows answer 2 instead of 2.25. And, finally a%b
is 1,i.e. ,when a=9
is divided by b=4
, remainder is 1.Suppose a=5.0, b=2.0, c=5 and d=2 In C programming, a/b=2.5 a/d=2.5 c/b=2.5 c/d=2
Note: % operator can only be used with integers.
Increment and decrement operators
In C,
++
and --
are called increment and decrement operators respectively. Both of these operators are unary operators, i.e, used on single operand. ++
adds 1 to operand and --
subtracts 1 to operand respectively. For example:Let a=5 and b=10 a++; //a becomes 6 a--; //a becomes 5 ++a; //a becomes 6 --a; //a becomes 5
Difference between ++ and -- operator as postfix and prefix
When
i++
is used as prefix(like: ++var
), ++var
will increment the value of var and then return it but, if ++
is used as postfix(like: var++), operator will return the value of operand first and then only increment it. This can be demonstrated by an example:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
int c=2,d=2;
printf("%d\n",c++); //this statement displays 2 then, only c incremented by 1 to 3.
printf("%d",++c); //this statement increments 1 to c then, only c is displayed.
return 0;
}
Output
2 4
Assignment Operators
The most common assignment operator is
=
. This operator assigns the value in right side to the left side. For example:var=5 //5 is assigned to var a=c; //value of c is assigned to a 5=c; // Error! 5 is a constant.
Operator | Example | Same as |
---|---|---|
= | a=b | a=b |
+= | a+=b | a=a+b |
-= | a-=b | a=a-b |
*= | a*=b | a=a*b |
/= | a/=b | a=a/b |
%= | a%=b | a=a%b |
Relational Operator
Relational operators checks relationship between two operands. If the relation is true, it returns value 1 and if the relation is false, it returns value 0. For example:
a>b
Here,
>
is a relational operator. If a is greater than b, a>b returns 1 if not then, it returns 0.
Relational operators are used in decision making and loops in C programming.
Operator | Meaning of Operator | Example |
---|---|---|
== | Equal to | 5==3 returns false (0) |
> | Greater than | 5>3 returns true (1) |
< | Less than | 5<3 returns false (0) |
!= | Not equal to | 5!=3 returns true(1) |
>= | Greater than or equal to | 5>=3 returns true (1) |
<= | Less than or equal to | 5<=3 return false (0) |
Logical Operators
Logical operators are used to combine expressions containing relation operators. In C, there are 3 logical operators:
Operator | Meaning of Operator | Example |
---|---|---|
&& | Logial AND | If c=5 and d=2 then,((c==5) && (d>5)) returns false. |
|| | Logical OR | If c=5 and d=2 then, ((c==5) || (d>5)) returns true. |
! | Logical NOT | If c=5 then, !(c==5) returns false. |
Explanation
For expression, ((c==5) && (d>5)) to be true, both c==5 and d>5 should be true but, (d>5) is false in the given example. So, the expression is false. For expression
((c==5) || (d>5))
to be true, either the expression should be true. Since, (c==5)
is true. So, the expression is true. Since, expression (c==5)
is true, !(c==5)
is false.Conditional Operator
Conditional operator takes three operands and consists of two symbols ? and : . Conditional operators are used for decision making in C. For example:
c=(c>0)?10:-10;
If c is greater than 0, value of c will be 10 but, if c is less than 0, value of c will be -10.
Bitwise Operators
A bitwise operator works on each bit of data. Bitwise operators are used in bit level programming.
Operators | Meaning of operators |
---|---|
& | Bitwise AND |
| | Bitwise OR |
^ | Bitwise exclusive OR |
~ | Bitwise complement |
<< | Shift left |
>> | Shift right |
Bitwise operator is advance topic in programming . Learn more about bitwise operator in C programming.
Other Operators
Comma Operator
Comma operators are used to link related expressions together. For example:
int a,c=5,d;
The sizeof operator
It is a unary operator which is used in finding the size of data type, constant, arrays, structure etc. For example:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
int a;
float b;
double c;
char d;
printf("Size of int=%d bytes\n",sizeof(a));
printf("Size of float=%d bytes\n",sizeof(b));
printf("Size of double=%d bytes\n",sizeof(c));
printf("Size of char=%d byte\n",sizeof(d));
return 0;
}
Output
Size of int=4 bytes Size of float=4 bytes Size of double=8 bytes Size of char=1 byte
Conditional operators (?:)
Conditional operators are used in decision making in C programming, i.e, executes different statements according to test condition whether it is either true or false.
Syntax of conditional operators
conditional_expression?expression1:expression2
If the test condition is true,
expression1
is returned and if false expression2
is returned.Example of conditional operator
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
char feb;
int days;
printf("Enter l if the year is leap year otherwise enter 0: ");
scanf("%c",&feb);
days=(feb=='l')?29:28;
/*If test condition (feb=='l') is true, days will be equal to 29. */
/*If test condition (feb=='l') is false, days will be equal to 28. */
printf("Number of days in February = %d",days);
return 0;
}
Output
Enter l if the year is leap year otherwise enter n: l Number of days in February = 29
Other operators such as &(reference operator), *(dereference operator) and ->(member selection) operator will be discussed in pointer chapter.
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