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  2. Relational operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_operator

    However, it does compile in C/C++ and some other languages, yielding surprising result (as true would be represented by the number 1 here). It is possible to give the expression x < y < z its familiar mathematical meaning, and some programming languages such as Python and Raku do that.

  3. Ternary conditional operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ternary_conditional_operator

    The detailed semantics of "the" ternary operator as well as its syntax differs significantly from language to language. A top level distinction from one language to another is whether the expressions permit side effects (as in most procedural languages) and whether the language provides short-circuit evaluation semantics, whereby only the selected expression is evaluated (most standard ...

  4. Three-way comparison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-way_comparison

    The three-way comparison operator or "spaceship operator" for numbers is denoted as <=> in Perl, Ruby, Apache Groovy, PHP, Eclipse Ceylon, and C++, and is called the spaceship operator. [2] In C++, the C++20 revision adds the spaceship operator <=>, which returns a value that encodes whether the 2 values are equal, less, greater, or unordered ...

  5. Conditional operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conditional_operator

    expression 1, expression 2: Expressions with values of any type. If the condition is evaluated to true, the expression 1 will be evaluated. If the condition is evaluated to false, the expression 2 will be evaluated. It should be read as: "If condition is true, assign the value of expression 1 to result.

  6. Bit-reversal permutation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bit-reversal_permutation

    In the random-access machine commonly used in algorithm analysis, a simple algorithm that scans the indexes in input order and swaps whenever the scan encounters an index whose reversal is a larger number would perform a linear number of data moves. [10] However, computing the reversal of each index may take a non-constant number of steps.

  7. Yoda conditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoda_conditions

    Python 3.8 introduced assignment expressions, but uses the walrus operator := instead of a regular equal sign (=) to avoid bugs which simply confuse == with =. [13] Another disadvantage appears in C++ when comparing non-basic types as the == is an operator and there may not be a suitable overloaded operator function defined.

  8. Elvis operator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elvis_operator

    In Gosu, the ?: operator returns the right operand if the left is null as well. In C#, the null-conditional operator, ?. is referred to as the "Elvis operator", [10] but it does not perform the same function. Instead, the null-coalescing operator?? does. In ColdFusion and CFML, the Elvis operator was introduced using the ?: syntax.

  9. Operator-precedence parser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operator-precedence_parser

    In computer science, an operator-precedence parser is a bottom-up parser that interprets an operator-precedence grammar.For example, most calculators use operator-precedence parsers to convert from the human-readable infix notation relying on order of operations to a format that is optimized for evaluation such as Reverse Polish notation (RPN).