C# Operators
C# provides a large set of operators, which are symbols that specify which operations to perform in an expression. Operations on integral types such as ==, !=, <, >, <=, >=, binary +, binary -, ^, &, |, ~, ++, --, and sizeof() are generally allowed on enumerations. In addition, many operators can be overloaded by the user, thus changing their meaning when applied to a user-defined type.
The following table lists the C# operators grouped in order of precedence. Operators within each group have equal precedence.
Operator category |
Operators |
---|---|
Primary |
|
Unary |
|
Multiplicative |
|
Additive |
|
Shift |
|
Relational and type testing |
|
Equality |
|
Logical AND |
|
Logical XOR |
|
Logical OR |
|
Conditional AND |
|
Conditional OR |
|
Conditional |
|
Assignment |
|
Null-coalescing |
|
Lambda |
Arithmetic Overflow
The arithmetic operators (+, -, *, /) can produce results that are outside the range of possible values for the numeric type involved. You should refer to the section on a particular operator for details, but in general:
Integer arithmetic overflow either throws an OverflowException or discards the most significant bits of the result. Integer division by zero always throws a DivideByZeroException.
Floating-point arithmetic overflow or division by zero never throws an exception, because floating-point types are based on IEEE 754 and so have provisions for representing infinity and NaN (Not a Number).
Decimal arithmetic overflow always throws an OverflowException. Decimal division by zero always throws a DivideByZeroException.
When integer overflow occurs, what happens depends on the execution context, which can be checked or unchecked. In a checked context, an OverflowException is thrown. In an unchecked context, the most significant bits of the result are discarded and execution continues. Thus, C# gives you the choice of handling or ignoring overflow.
In addition to the arithmetic operators, integral-type to integral-type casts can cause overflow, for example, casting a long to an int, and are subject to checked or unchecked execution. However, bitwise operators and shift operators never cause overflow.
See Also
Tasks
Concepts
Reference
Overloadable Operators (C# Programming Guide)
Other Resources
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
July 2008 |
Moved ?? operator out of assignment category per customer suggestion. |
Content bug fix. |