Expressions
Expressions
are used in @, if, and
while statements to perform arithmetic, string
comparisons, file testing, and so on. exit and
set also specify expressions, as can the
tcsh built-in command
filetest. Expressions are formed by combining
variables and constants with operators that resemble those in the C
programming language. Operator precedence is the same as in C but can
be remembered as follows:
* / %+ -
Group all other expressions inside parentheses. Parentheses are
required if the expression contains <,
>, &, or
|.
Operators
Operators can be one of the types listed in the following tables.
Assignment operators
Assignment operators
|
Operator |
Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Assign value. |
|
|
Reassign after addition/subtraction. |
|
|
Reassign after multiplication/division/remainder. |
|
|
Reassign after bitwise AND/XOR/OR. |
|
|
Increment. |
|
|
Decrement. |
Arithmetic operators
|
Operator |
Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Multiplication; integer division; modulus (remainder) |
|
|
Addition; subtraction |
Bitwise and logical operators
|
Operator |
Description |
|---|---|
|
|
Binary inversion (one’s complement). |
|
|
Logical negation. |
|
|
Bitwise left shift; bitwise right shift. |
|
|
Bitwise AND. |
|
|
Bitwise exclusive OR. |
|
|
Bitwise OR. |
|
|
Logical AND. |
|
|
Logical OR. |
|
|
Return 1 if command is successful, 0 otherwise. Note that this is the
opposite of |