C Logical Operators
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The logical operators perform logical-AND (&&) and logical-OR ( ||
) operations.
Syntax
logical-AND-expression:
inclusive-OR-expression
logical-AND-expression && inclusive-OR-expression
logical-OR-expression:
logical-AND-expression
logical-OR-expression || logical-AND-expression
Logical operators do not perform the usual arithmetic conversions. Instead, they evaluate each operand in terms of its equivalence to 0. The result of a logical operation is either 0 or 1. The result's type is int
.
The C logical operators are described below:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
&& | The logical-AND operator produces the value 1 if both operands have nonzero values. If either operand is equal to 0, the result is 0. If the first operand of a logical-AND operation is equal to 0, the second operand is not evaluated. |
|| |
The logical-OR operator performs an inclusive-OR operation on its operands. The result is 0 if both operands have 0 values. If either operand has a nonzero value, the result is 1. If the first operand of a logical-OR operation has a nonzero value, the second operand is not evaluated. |
The operands of logical-AND and logical-OR expressions are evaluated from left to right. If the value of the first operand is sufficient to determine the result of the operation, the second operand is not evaluated. This is called "short-circuit evaluation." There is a sequence point after the first operand. See Sequence Points for more information.
Examples
The following examples illustrate the logical operators:
int w, x, y, z;
if ( x < y && y < z )
printf( "x is less than z\n" );
In this example, the printf
function is called to print a message if x
is less than y
and y
is less than z
. If x
is greater than y
, the second operand (y < z
) is not evaluated and nothing is printed. Note that this could cause problems in cases where the second operand has side effects that are being relied on for some other reason.
printf( "%d" , (x == w || x == y || x == z) );
In this example, if x
is equal to either w
, y
, or z
, the second argument to the printf
function evaluates to true and the value 1 is printed. Otherwise, it evaluates to false and the value 0 is printed. As soon as one of the conditions evaluates to true, evaluation ceases.