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Operators are special symbols used for specific purposes. C provides many operators for manipulating data. Generally, there are six type of operators : Arithmetical operators, Relational operators, Logical operators, Assignment operators, Conditional operators, sizeof operator.

Arithmetical operators

Arithmetical operators +, -, *, /, and % are used to performs an arithmetic (numeric) operation.

Operator

Meaning

+

Addition

-

Subtraction

*

Multiplication

/

Division

%

Modulus

You can use the operators +, -, *, and / with both integral and floating-point data types. Modulus or remainder % operator is used only with the integral data type.

Binary operators

Operators that have two operands are called binary operators.

Unary operators

C provides two unary operators for which only one variable is required.

For Example

a = - 50;
a = + 50;
Here plus sign (+) and minus sign (-) are unary because they are not used between two variables.

Relational operators

The relational operators are used to test the relation between two values. All relational operators are binary operators and therefore require two operands. A relational expression returns zero when the relation is false and a non-zero when it is true. The following table shows the relational operators.

Relational Operators

Meaning

Less than

<=

Less than or equal to

==

Equal to

Greater than

>=

Greater than or equal to

! =

Not equal to

Logical operators

The logical operators are used to combine one or more relational expression. The logical operators are

Operators

Meaning

||

OR

&&

AND

!

NOT

Assignment operator

The assignment operator '=' is used for assigning a variable to a value. This operator takes the expression on its right-hand-side and places it into the variable on its left-hand-side. For example:

m = 5;

The operator takes the expression on the right, 5, and stores it in the variable on the left, m.

x = y = z = 32;

This code stores the value 32 in each of the three variables x, y, and z. in addition to standard assignment operator shown above, C also support compound assignment operators.

Compound Assignment Operators

Operator

Example

Equivalent to

+ =

A + = 2

A = A + 2

- =

A - = 2

A = A - 2

% =

A % = 2

A = A % 2

/=

A/ = 2

A = A / 2

*=

A * = 2

A = A * 2

Increment and Decrement Operators

C provides two special operators viz '++' and '--' for incrementing and decrementing the value of a variable by 1. The increment/decrement operator can be used with any type of variable but it cannot be used with any constant. Increment and decrement operators each have two forms, pre and post.

The syntax of the increment operator is:
Pre-increment: ++variable
Post-increment: variable++
The syntax of the decrement operator is:
Pre-decrement: --variable
Post-decrement: variable--

In Prefix form first variable is first incremented/decremented, then evaluated

In Postfix form first variable is first evaluated, then incremented/decremented

int x, y;
int i = 10, j = 10;
x = ++i; //add one to i, store the result back in x
y = j++; //store the value of j to y then add one to j
printf("%d", x); //11

printf("%d", y); //10

Conditional operator

The conditional operator ?: is called ternary operator as it requires three operands. The format of the conditional operator is:

Conditional_ expression ? expression1 : expression2;

If the value of conditional expression is true then the expression1 is evaluated, otherwise expression2 is evaluated.

int a = 5, b = 6;
big = (a > b) ? a : b;

The condition evaluates to false, therefore big gets the value from b and it becomes 6.

The sizeof operator

As we know that different types of Variables, constant, etc. require different amounts of memory to store them The sizeof operator can be used to find how many bytes are required for an object to store in memory. For example
sizeof (char) returns 1
sizeof (float) returns 4

the sizeof operator determines the amount of memory required for an object at compile time rather than at run time.

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