Expressions and Operators
An expression is a sequence of operators and operands that specifies a computation. C# has unary operators, binary operators, and one ternary operator. Complex expressions can be built because an operand may itself be an expression, such as the operand (1 + 2) shown in the following example:
((1 + 2) / 3)
Operator Precedence
When an expression contains multiple operators, the precedence of the operators controls the order in which the individual operators are evaluated. When the operators are of the same precedence, their associativity determines the order. Binary operators (except for assignment operators) are left-associative; i.e., they are evaluated from left to right. The assignment operators, unary operators, and the conditional operator are right-associative; i.e., they are evaluated from right to left. For example:
1 + 2 + 3 * 4
is evaluated as:
((1 + 2) + (3 * 4))
because * has a higher precedence than +, and + is a binary operator that is left-associative. You can insert parentheses to change the default order of evaluation. C# overloads operators, which means the same operator can have different meanings for different types.
Table 1-2 lists C#’s operators in order of precedence. Operators in the same box have the same precedence, and operators in italic may be overloaded for custom types.
Table 1-2. Operator precedence table
Category |
Operators |
Examples |
---|---|---|
Primary |
Grouping: Member access: Struct pointer member access: Method call: Indexing: ... |
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