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Pre and post increment
does anybody know the logic behind ++x + ++x + ++x. and statements like that where preincremet is used more than once. its a bit counterintuitive!
4 Respostas
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x++ simply means (x += 1) or (x = x + 1) which are the same thing.
So say:
x = 0
x++ + 2 means increment x by 1 AFTER evaluating the statement\line\expression (i.e. execute the statement (x+2) THEN increase x by 1 which would = 2).
++x + 2 means increment x by 1 BEFORE evaluating the statement\line\expression (i.e. increase x by 1 THEN execute the statement (x+2) which would = 3).
The location of (++) is kind of meant to imply before (++x) and after (x++).
Hope this helps.
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I think different compilers might give different results depending on how they implement their pre-post-in-fix operations.
I've tested this on
- MS Visual Studio C++ compiler; the answer is: 18
- Playground here on sololearn; the answer is: 16 (most likely gcc)
- Linux using gcc 4.8.5 which also gives: 16
- Chrome console (JS) which gives: 15
Anyways, here is a quick general explanation -- as I understand it:
- Based on your example, we assume x = 3
- MS VS seems to hold the whole expression's evaluation until the last increment of x which is the third one in our example. By the time it increment the last one, x will equal 6 because it's been incremented 3 times. So essentially, the final execution is for the whole expression which will give: (x + x + x) = (6 + 6 + 6) = 18 replacing all x's by the last value we got from the last increment.
- gcc seems to evaluate them in pairs. So it first evaluates (++x + ++x) which will have the same logic as above. By the time we reach the 2nd ++x, x will equal 5 in our example (a total of two increments). So (5 + 5) = 10. Then, (10 + ++x) = (10 + 6) = 16. And if you have 4 terms, then it would evaluate the 2nd pair of (++x)'s on its own then add it to the previous result ... and so on.
- Chrome JS seems to evaluate each term on its own and immediately replace the result of x instead of referencing x at the final evaluation. So (++x + ++x + ++x) = (4 + ++x + ++x) = (4 + 5 + ++x) = (4 + 5 + 6) = 15.
I'm not a 100% sure that this is what's exactly going on, but that's how I understand it at the moment given the limited and quick tests.
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thank you indeed
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if x=3;
cout<< ++x + ++x + ++x;
i was expecting an output 15!!!