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Operators in Java

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Operators in Java - is a symbol that is used to perform operations. For example: +, -, *, / etc.

There are many types of operators in Java which are given below:

Unary Operator,
Arithmetic Operator,
Shift Operator,
Relational Operator,
Bitwise Operator,
Logical Operator,
Ternary Operator and
Assignment Operator.
Java Operator Precedence


Operator Type      Category          Precedence   

Unary                        postfix           expr++ expr--
prefix                        ++expr --expr +expr -expr ~ !
Arithmetic                     multiplicative * / %
additive                    + -
Shift                         shift << >> >>>
Relational                 comparison < > <= >= instanceof
equality                         == !=
Bitwise                        bitwise AND &
bitwise                          exclusive OR ^
bitwise                          inclusive OR |
Logical                        logical AND &&
logical                            OR ||
Ternary                         ternary ? :
Assignment assignment = += -= *= /= %= &= ^= |= <<= >>= >>>=


Java Unary Operator

The Java unary operators require only one operand. Unary operators are used to perform various operations i.e.:


incrementing/decrementing a value by one
negating an expression
inverting the value of a boolean


Java Unary Operator Example: ++ and --

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int x=10;  
System.out.println(x++);//10 (11)  
System.out.println(++x);//12  
System.out.println(x--);//12 (11)  
System.out.println(--x);//10  
}}  


Java Unary Operator Example 2: ++ and --

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=10;  
System.out.println(a++ + ++a);//10+12=22  
System.out.println(b++ + b++);//10+11=21  
  
}}  


Java Unary Operator Example: ~ and !


public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=-10;  
boolean c=true;  
boolean d=false;  
System.out.println(~a);//-11 (minus of total positive value which starts from 0)  
System.out.println(~b);//9 (positive of total minus, positive starts from 0)  
System.out.println(!c);//false (opposite of boolean value)  
System.out.println(!d);//true  
}}  


Java Arithmetic Operators
Java arithmetic operators are used to perform addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. They act as basic mathematical operations.

Java Arithmetic Operator Example

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=5;  
System.out.println(a+b);//15  
System.out.println(a-b);//5  
System.out.println(a*b);//50  
System.out.println(a/b);//2  
System.out.println(a%b);//0  
}}  


Java Arithmetic Operator Example: Expression

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
System.out.println(10*10/5+3-1*4/2);          //21
}}  


Java Left Shift Operator
The Java left shift operator << is used to shift all of the bits in a value to the left side of a specified number of times.

Java Left Shift Operator Example

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
System.out.println(10<<2);//10*2^2=10*4=40  
System.out.println(10<<3);//10*2^3=10*8=80  
System.out.println(20<<2);//20*2^2=20*4=80  
System.out.println(15<<4);//15*2^4=15*16=240  
}}  


Java Right Shift Operator

The Java right shift operator >> is used to move the value of the left operand to right by the number of bits specified by the right operand.

Java Right Shift Operator Example

public OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
System.out.println(10>>2);//10/2^2=10/4=2          //2
System.out.println(20>>2);//20/2^2=20/4=5           //5
System.out.println(20>>3);//20/2^3=20/8=2           //2
}}  


Java Shift Operator Example: >> vs >>>

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
    //For positive number, >> and >>> works same  
    System.out.println(20>>2);                                        //5
    System.out.println(20>>>2);                                        //5
    //For negative number, >>> changes parity bit (MSB) to 0  
    System.out.println(-20>>2);                                      //-5
    System.out.println(-20>>>2);                                       // 1073741819
}}  


Java AND Operator Example: Logical && and Bitwise &

The logical && operator doesn't check the second condition if the first condition is false. It checks the second condition only if the first one is true.

The bitwise & operator always checks both conditions whether first condition is true or false.


public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=5;  
int c=20;  
System.out.println(a
System.out.println(a
}}  


Java AND Operator Example: Logical && vs Bitwise &

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=5;  
int c=20;  
System.out.println(a
System.out.println(a);//10 because second condition is not checked           //10
System.out.println(a
System.out.println(a);//11 because second condition is checked                 //11
}}  


Java OR Operator Example: Logical || and Bitwise |

The logical || operator doesn't check the second condition if the first condition is true. It checks the second condition only if the first one is false.


The bitwise | operator always checks both conditions whether first condition is true or false.

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=5;  
int c=20;  
System.out.println(a>b||a
System.out.println(a>b|a
//|| vs |  
System.out.println(a>b||a++
System.out.println(a);//10 because second condition is not checked            //10
System.out.println(a>b|a++
System.out.println(a);//11 because second condition is checked                //11
}}  


Java Ternary Operator

Java Ternary operator is used as one line replacement for if-then-else statements and is used a lot in Java programming. It is the only conditional operator which takes 
three operands.

Java Ternary Operator Example

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=2;  
int b=5;  
int min=(a
System.out.println(min);     //2
}}  


Java Assignment Operator

Java assignment operator is one of the most common operators. It is used to assign the value on its right to the operand on its left.

Java Assignment Operator Example

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
int a=10;  
int b=20;  
a+=4;//a=a+4 (a=10+4)  
b-=4;//b=b-4 (b=20-4)  
System.out.println(a);     //14
System.out.println(b);       //16
}}  


Java Assignment Operator Example

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String[] args){  
int a=10;  
a+=3;//10+3  
System.out.println(a);     //13
a-=4;//13-4  
System.out.println(a);      //9
a*=2;//9*2  
System.out.println(a);      //18
a/=2;//18/2  
System.out.println(a);      //9
}}  


Java Assignment Operator Example: Adding short

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
short a=10;  
short b=10;  
//a+=b;//a=a+b internally so fine  
a=a+b;//Compile time error because 10+10=20 now int  
System.out.println(a);      // compile time error
}}  


After type cast:

public class OperatorExample{  
public static void main(String args[]){  
short a=10;  
short b=10;  
a=(short)(a+b);//20 which is int now converted to short  
System.out.println(a);      // 20
}}  



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