+ Operator (C# Reference) 

The + operator can function as either a unary or a binary operator.

Remarks

Unary + operators are predefined for all numeric types. The result of a unary + operation on a numeric type is simply the value of the operand.

Binary + operators are predefined for numeric and string types. For numeric types, + computes the sum of its two operands. When one or both operands are of type string, + concatenates the string representations of the operands.

Delegate types also provide a binary + operator, which performs delegate concatenation.

User-defined types can overload the unary + and binary + operators (see operator). Operations on integral types are generally allowed on enumeration.

Example

// cs_operator_plus.cs
using System;
class MainClass
{
    static void Main() 
    {
        Console.WriteLine(+5);        // unary plus
        Console.WriteLine(5 + 5);     // addition
        Console.WriteLine(5 + .5);    // addition
        Console.WriteLine("5" + "5"); // string concatenation
        Console.WriteLine(5.0 + "5"); // string concatenation
        // note automatic conversion from double to string
    }
}

Output

5
10
5.5
55
55

C# Language Specification

For more information, see the following sections in the C# Language Specification:

  • 1.6.6.5 Operators

  • 7.2 Operators

See Also

Reference

C# Operators

Concepts

C# Programming Guide

Other Resources

C# Reference