Chapter 2 Operators and assignments
1. Unary operators.
1.1 Increment and Decrement operators ++ --
We have postfix and prefix
notation. In post-fix notation value of the variable/expression is modified
after the value is taken for the execution of statement. In prefix notation,
value of the variable/expression is modified before the value is taken
for the execution of statement.
x = 5; y = 0;
y = x++; Result will be x = 6, y = 5
x = 5; y = 0;
y = ++x; Result will be x = 6, y = 6
Implicit narrowing conversion
is done, when applied to byte, short or char.
1.2 Unary minus and unary plus + -
+ has no effect than to stress
positivity.
- negates an expression’s
value. (2’s complement for integral expressions)
1.3 Negation !
Inverts the value of a boolean
expression.
1.4 Complement ~
Inverts the bit pattern of an
integral expression. (1’s complement – 0s to 1s and 1s to 0s)
Cannot be applied to
non-integral types.
1.5 Cast ()
Persuades compiler to allow
certain assignments. Extensive checking is done at compile and runtime to ensure
type-safety.
2. Arithmetic
operators - *, /, %, +, -
· Can be applied to all numeric types.
· Can be applied to only the numeric types,
except ‘+’ – it can be applied to Strings as well.
· All arithmetic operations are done at
least with ‘int’. (If types are smaller, promotion happens. Result will be of a
type at least as wide as the wide type of operands)
· Accuracy is lost silently when arithmetic
overflow/error occurs. Result is a nonsense value.
· Integer division by zero throws an
exception.
· % - reduce the magnitude of LHS by the
magnitude of RHS. (continuous subtraction)
· % - sign of the result entirely
determined by sign of LHS
· 5 % 0 throws an ArithmeticException.
· Floating point calculations can produce
NaN (square root of a negative no) or Infinity ( division by zero). Float and
Double wrapper classes have named constants for NaN and infinities.
· NaN’s are non-ordinal for comparisons. x
== Float.NaN won’t work. Use Float.IsNaN(x) But
equals method on wrapper objects(Double or Float) with NaN values compares Nan’s
correctly.
· Infinities are ordinal. X ==
Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY will give expected result.
· + also performs String concatenation
(when any operand in an expression is a String). The language itself overloads
this operator. toString method of non-String object operands are called to
perform concatenation. In case of primitives, a wrapper object is created with
the primitive value and toString method of that object is called. (“Vel” + 3
will work.)
· Be aware of associativity when multiple
operands are involved.
System.out.println( 1 + 2 + “3” ); // Prints 33
System.out.println( “1” + 2 + 3 ); // Prints 123
3. Shift operators -
<<, >>, >>>
· << performs a signed left shift. 0 bits
are brought in from the right. Sign bit (MSB) is preserved. Value becomes old
value * 2 ^ x where x is no of bits shifted.
· >> performs a signed right shift. Sign
bit is brought in from the left. (0 if positive, 1 if negative. Value becomes
old value / 2 ^ x where x is no of bits shifted. Also called arithmetic right
shift.
· >>> performs an unsigned logical right
shift. 0 bits are brought in from the left. This operator exists since Java
doesn’t provide an unsigned data type (except char). >>> changes the sign of a
negative number to be positive. So don’t use it with negative numbers, if you
want to preserve the sign. Also don’t use it with types smaller than int. (Since
types smaller than int are promoted to an int before any shift operation and the
result is cast down again, so the end result is unpredictable.)
· Shift operators can be applied to only
integral types.
· -1 >> 1 is –1, not 0. This differs from
simple division by 2. We can think of it as shift operation rounding down.
· 1 << 31 will become the minimum value
that an int can represent. (Value becomes negative, after this operation, if you
do a signed right shift sign bit is brought in from the left and the value
remains negative.)
· Negative numbers are represented in two’s
complement notation. (Take one’s complement and add 1 to get two’s complement)
· Shift operators never shift more than the
number of bits the type of result can have. ( i.e. int 32, long 64) RHS operand
is reduced to RHS % x where x is no of bits in type of result.
int x;
x = x >> 33; // Here
actually what happens is x >> 1
4. Comparison
operators – all return boolean type.
4.1 Ordinal comparisons - <, <=, > , >=
· Only operate on numeric types. Test the
relative value of the numeric operands.
· Arithmetic promotions apply. char can be
compared to float.
4.2 Object type comparison – instanceof
· Tests the class of an object at runtime.
Checking is done at compile and runtime same as the cast operator.
· Returns true if the object denoted by LHS
reference can be cast to RHS type.
· LHS should be an object reference
expression, variable or an array reference.
· RHS should be a class (abstract classes
are fine), an interface or an array type, castable to LHS object reference.
Compiler error if LHS & RHS are unrelated.
· Can’t use java.lang.Class or its String
name as RHS.
· Returns true if LHS is a class or
subclass of RHS class
· Returns true if LHS implements RHS
interface.
· Returns true if LHS is an array reference
and of type RHS.
· x instanceof Component[] – legal.
· x instanceof [] – illegal. Can’t test for
‘any array of any type’
· Returns false if LHS is null, no
exceptions are thrown.
· If x instanceof Y is not allowed by
compiler, then Y y = (Y) x is not a valid cast expression. If x instanceof Y is
allowed and returns false, the above cast is valid but throws a
ClassCastException at runtime. If x instanceof Y returns true, the above cast is
valid and runs fine.
4.3 Equality comparisons - ==, !=
· For primitives it’s a straightforward
value comparison. (promotions apply)
· For object references, this doesn’t make
much sense. Use equals method for meaningful comparisons. (Make sure that the
class implements equals in a meaningful way, like for X.equals(Y) to be true, Y
instance of X must be true as well)
· For String literals, == will return true,
this is because of compiler optimization.
5. Bit-wise
operators - &, ^, |
· Operate on numeric and boolean operands.
· & - AND operator, both bits must be 1 to
produce 1.
· | - OR operator, any one bit can be 1 to
produce 1.
· ^ - XOR operator, any one bit can be 1,
but not both, to produce 1.
· In case of booleans true is 1, false is
0.
· Can’t cast any other type to boolean.
6. Short-circuit
logical operators - &&, ||
· Operate only on boolean types.
· RHS might not be evaluated (hence the
name short-circuit), if the result can be determined only by looking at LHS.
· false && X is
always false.
· true || X is always true.
· RHS is evaluated only if the result is
not certain from the LHS.
· That’s why there’s no logical XOR
operator. Both bits need to be known to calculate the result.
· Short-circuiting doesn’t change the
result of the operation. But side effects might be changed. (i.e. some
statements in RHS might not be executed, if short-circuit happens. Be careful)
7. Ternary operator
· Format a = x ? b : c ;
· x should be a boolean expression.
· Based on x, either b or c is evaluated.
Both are never evaluated.
· b will be assigned to a if x is true,
else c is assigned to a.
· b and c should be assignment compatible
to a.
· b and c are made identical during the
operation according to promotions.
8. Assignment
operators.
· Simple assignment =.
· op= calculate and assign
operators(extended assignment operators)
· *=, /=, %=, +=, -=
· x += y means x = x + y. But x is
evaluated only once. Be aware.
· Assignment of reference variables copies
the reference value, not the object body.
· Assignment has value, value of LHS after
assignment. So a = b = c = 0 is legal. c = 0 is executed first, and the value of
the assignment (0) assigned to b, then the value of that assignment (again 0) is
assigned to a.
· Extended assignment operators do an
implicit cast. (Useful when applied to byte, short or char)
byte b = 10;
b = b + 10; //
Won’t compile, explicit cast required since the expression evaluates to an int
b += 10; //
OK, += does an implicit cast from int to byte
9.
General
· In Java, No overflow or underflow of
integers happens. i.e. The values wrap around. Adding 1 to the maximum int value
results in the minimum value.
· Always keep in mind that operands are
evaluated from left to right, and the operations are executed in the order of
precedence and associativity.
· Unary Postfix operators and all binary
operators (except assignment operators) have left to right assoiciativity.
· All unary operators (except postfix
operators), assignment operators, ternary operator, object creation and cast
operators have right to left assoiciativity.
· Inspect the following code.
public class
Precedence {
final public static void main(String args[]) {
int i = 0;
i = i++;
i = i++;
i = i++;
System.out.println(i);
// prints 0,
since = operator has the lowest precedence.
int array[] = new int[5];
int index = 0;
array[index] =
index = 3;
// 1st
element gets assigned to 3, not the 4th element
for (int c = 0; c < array.length; c++)
System.out.println(array[c]);
System.out.println("index is " + index); // prints 3
}
}
|
Type of Operators |
Operators |
Associativity |
|
Postfix operators |
[] .
(parameters) ++ -- |
Left to
Right |
|
Prefix Unary operators |
++
-- + - ~ ! |
Right to Left |
|
Object creation and cast |
new (type) |
Right to Left |
|
Multiplication/Division/Modulus |
* / % |
Left to Right |
|
Addition/Subtraction |
+ - |
Left to Right |
|
Shift |
>> >>> << |
Left to Right |
|
Relational |
< <= > >= instanceof |
Left to Right |
|
Equality |
== != |
Left to Right |
|
Bit-wise/Boolean AND |
& |
Left to Right |
|
Bit-wise/Boolean XOR |
^ |
Left to Right |
|
Bit-wise/Boolean OR |
| |
Left to Right |
|
Logical AND (Short-circuit or
Conditional) |
&& |
Left to Right |
|
Logical OR (Short-circuit or
Conditional) |
|| |
Left to Right |
|
Ternary |
? : |
Right to Left |
|
Assignment |
= += -= *= /= %= <<= >>= >>>=
&= ^= |= |
Right to Left |
