Expressions
An expression is a sequence of operators and their operands, that specifies a computation.
Expression evaluation may produce a result (e.g., evaluation of 2+2 produces the result 4), may generate side-effects (e.g. evaluation of printf("%d",4) sends the character '4' to the standard output stream), and may designate objects or functions.
General
- value categories (lvalue, non-lvalue object, function designator) classify expressions by their values
- order of evaluation of arguments and subexpressions specifies the order in which intermediate results are obtained
Operators
Common operators | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
assignment | increment decrement |
arithmetic | logical | comparison | member access |
other |
a = b |
++a |
+a |
!a |
a == b |
a[b] |
a(...) |
- operator precedence defines the order in which operators are bound to their arguments
- alternative representations are alternative spellings for some operators
Conversions
- Implicit conversions take place when types of operands do not match the expectations of operators
- Casts may be used to explicitly convert values from one type to another.
Other
- constant expressions can be evaluated at compile time and used in compile-time context (non-VLA array sizes, static initializers, etc)
- generic selections can execute different expressions depending on the types of the arguments
- Floating-point expressions may raise exceptions and report errors as specified in math_errhandling
- The standard #pragmas
FENV_ACCESS
,FP_CONTRACT
, andCX_LIMITED_RANGE
as well as the floating-point evaluation precision and rounding direction control the way floating-point expressions are executed.
Primary expressions
The operands of any operator may be other expressions or they may be primary expressions (e.g. in 1+2*3, the operands of operator+ are the subexpression 2*3 and the primary expression 1).
Primary expressions are any of the following:
Any expression in parentheses is also classified as a primary expression: this guarantees that the parentheses have higher precedence than any operator.
Constants and literals
Constant values of certain types may be embedded in the source code of a C program using specialized expressions known as literals (for lvalue expressions) and constants (for non-lvalue expressions)
- integer constants are decimal, octal, or hexadecimal numbers of integer type.
- character constants are individual characters of type int suitable for conversion to a character type or of type char16_t, char32_t, (since C11)or wchar_t
- floating constants are values of type float, double, or long double
- string literals are sequences of characters of type char[], char16_t[], char32_t[], or wchar_t[] that represent null-terminated strings
- compound literals are values of struct, union, or array type directly embedded in program code
Unevaluated expressions
The operands of the sizeof operator , the _Alignof operator, and the controlling expression of a generic selection, (since C11) are expressions that are not evaluated (unless they are VLAs) (since C99). Thus, size_t n = sizeof(printf("%d", 4)); does not perform console output.
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 6.5 Expressions (p: 76-105)
- 6.6 Constant expressions (p: 106-107)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 6.5 Expressions (p: 67-94)
- 6.6 Constant expressions (p: 95-96)
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
- 3.3 EXPRESSIONS
- 3.4 CONSTANT EXPRESSIONS
See also
C++ documentation for Expressions
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