Chapter 7. Operators

   

An operator is a symbol (e.g., = , +, > , etc.) that causes C# to take an action. That action might be an assignment of a value to a variable, the addition of two values, or a comparison of two values, etc.

In the previous chapters, you've seen a number of operators at work. For example, in Chapter 5 you saw the assignment operator used. The single equal sign ( = ) is used to assign a value to a variable, in this case the value 15 to the variable myVariable:

 myVariable = 15; 

In Chapter 6 you saw more sophisticated operators, such as the greater-than comparison operator (>) used to compare two values:

 if ( valueOne > valueTwo ) 

The preceding if statement compares valueOne with valueTwo; if the former is larger than the latter, the test evaluates true, and the if statement executes.

This chapter describes many of the operators used in C# in some detail.

   


Learning C#
Learning C# 3.0
ISBN: 0596521065
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 178

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