+ 13

C++ - Why a is assigned 1?

Result is 1 1: int a = 7, b = 1; if(a = 8 || b == 5) cout << a*b; cout << " " << a;

18th Sep 2019, 12:08 PM
Paolo De Nictolis
Paolo De Nictolis - avatar
9 Réponses
+ 19
Any non zero number is considered true. Short circuit evaluation for logical OR ignores the rest of the expression when the first operand evaluates to true. a = (8 || b == 5) a = (true || b == 5) // b == 5 is skipped a = (true) // true equals to 1 cout << a * b; // a(1) * b(1) output '1' cout << " " << a; // output a space and '1'
18th Sep 2019, 12:18 PM
Ipang
+ 8
if(a = 8 || b == 5) a = true || ( no evaluate because 1st _____________condition true , (1 + 0 = 1)) a = true true == 1 ( true = 1 and false = 0) a = 1
20th Sep 2019, 9:34 AM
Sushil
Sushil - avatar
+ 7
Why is 5 skipped??
19th Sep 2019, 10:25 PM
Gustave A C/D C ☢️ 🛸🛸🛸
Gustave A C/D C ☢️ 🛸🛸🛸 - avatar
+ 7
Gustav A C/D C ☢️ It is because of short circuit evaluation for the condition/expression in `if` statement. In this case, there is no need to evaluate right-hand side operand (`b == 5`), because left-hand side operand (8, a non zero value) is considered true, and thus is enough to conclude the evaluation result. A logical OR operator yields true when either one of the operands evaluates to true, in this case the left-hand side operand (8) does evaluate to true, that's why. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-circuit_evaluation
20th Sep 2019, 12:07 AM
Ipang
+ 7
|| has a higher precedence than =
20th Sep 2019, 4:23 AM
Sonic
Sonic - avatar
+ 5
I don't like to start sentences with "Am I the only one who..." but... Am I the only one who sees that there are more than 9000 answers and there are actually 5 answers to this question. I mean yesterday was the same and I thought it was a bug but now (even after update) it's still the same and no one mentioned this bug..
20th Sep 2019, 9:11 AM
voja
voja - avatar
+ 4
voja No worries, you're not the only one 😁 This morning I saw a note from moderator David Carroll (in another thread not here), in response to a call for aid about a spammer who heavily stormed the thread. I think most (if not all) of hot today was stormed. The spammers just managed to push thousands of spam responses. The spam was gone along with the user's account, but the response counter doesn't seem to be in sync. I guess it just happens with banned user account contents.
20th Sep 2019, 11:11 AM
Ipang
+ 4
This is because of the operator precedence. The other expression is evaluated to true that's why a is assigned 1 if it was evaluated to zero then a would have retained a 0 value.
20th Sep 2019, 11:18 AM
Deepak Dogra
Deepak Dogra - avatar