Logical operators apply standard boolean algebra operations to their operands.
Operator | Operator name | Example | Result |
---|---|---|---|
! | logical NOT | !a | the logical negation of a |
&& | logical AND | a && b | the logical AND of a and b |
|| | logical OR | a || b | the logical OR of a and b |
The logical NOT expression has the form.
! expression |
where.
expression | - | an expression of any scalar type |
The logical NOT operator has type int
. Its value is 0
if expression evaluates to a value that compares unequal to zero. Its value is 1
if expression evaluates to a value that compares equal to zero. (so !E
is the same as (0==E)
).
#include <stdbool.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <ctype.h> int main(void) { bool b = !(2+2 == 4); // not true printf("!(2+2==4) = %s\n", b ? "true" : "false"); int n = isspace('a'); // zero if 'a' is a space, nonzero otherwise int x = !!n; // "bang-bang", common C idiom for mapping integers to [0,1] // (all non-zero values become 1) char *a[2] = {"nonspace", "space"}; printf("%s\n", a[x]); // now x can be safely used as an index to array of 2 ints }
Output:
!(2+2==4) = false nonspace
The logical AND expression has the form.
lhs && rhs |
where.
lhs | - | an expression of any scalar type |
rhs | - | an expression of any scalar type, which is only evaluated if lhs does not compare equal to 0 |
The logical-AND operator has type int
and the value 1
if both lhs and rhs compare unequal to zero. It has the value 0
otherwise (if either lhs or rhs or both compare equal to zero).
There is a sequence point after the evaluation of lhs. If the result of lhs compares equal to zero, then rhs is not evaluated at all (so-called short-circuit evaluation).
#include <stdbool.h> #include <stdio.h> int main(void) { bool b = 2+2==4 && 2*2==4; // b == true 1 > 2 && puts("this won't print"); char *p = "abc"; if(p && *p) // common C idiom: if p is not null // AND if p does not point at the end of the string { // (note that thanks to short-circuit evaluation, this // will not attempt to dereference a null pointer) // ... // ... then do some string processing } }
The logical OR expression has the form.
lhs || rhs |
where.
lhs | - | an expression of any scalar type |
rhs | - | an expression of any scalar type, which is only evaluated if lhs compares equal to 0 |
The logical-OR operator has type int
and the value 1
if either lhs or rhs compare unequal to zero. It has value 0
otherwise (if both lhs and rhs compare equal to zero).
There is a sequence point after the evaluation of lhs. If the result of lhs compares unequal to zero, then rhs is not evaluated at all (so-called short-circuit evaluation).
#include <stdbool.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include <errno.h> int main(void) { bool b = 2+2 == 4 || 2+2 == 5; // true printf("true or false = %s\n", b ? "true" : "false"); // logical OR can be used simialar to perl's "or die", as long as rhs has scalar type fopen("test.txt", "r") || printf("could not open test.txt: %s\n", strerror(errno)); }
Possible output:
true or false = true could not open test.txt: No such file or directory
Common operators | ||||||
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assignment | increment decrement | arithmetic | logical | comparison | member access | other |
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C++ documentation for Logical operators |
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