Logical operators
Returns the result of a boolean operation.
Operator name | Syntax | Overloadable | Prototype examples (for class T) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Inside class definition | Outside class definition | |||
negation | not a
|
Yes | bool T::operator!() const; | bool operator!(const T &a); |
AND | a and b
|
Yes | bool T::operator&&(const T2 &b) const; | bool operator&&(const T &a, const T2 &b); |
inclusive OR | a or b
|
Yes | bool T::operator||(const T2 &b) const; | bool operator||(const T &a, const T2 &b); |
|
Explanation
The logical operators apply logic functions (NOT, AND, and inclusive OR) to boolean arguments (or types contextually-convertible to bool), with a boolean result. Unlike the bitwise logic operators, these operators (in their built-in form) do not evaluate the second operand if the result is known after evaluating the first.
Builtin operators
The following built-in function signatures participate in overload resolution:
bool operator!(bool) |
||
bool operator&&(bool, bool) |
||
bool operator||(bool, bool) |
||
If the operand is not bool, it is converted to bool using contextual conversion to bool: it is only well-formed if the declaration bool t(arg)
is well-formed, for some invented temporary t
.
For the built-in logical NOT operator, the result is true if the operand is false. Otherwise, the result is false.
For the built-in logical AND operator, the result is true if both operands are true. Otherwise, the result is false. If the first operand is false, the second operand is not evaluated.
For the built-in logical OR operator, the result is true if either the first or the second operand (or both) is true. If the firstoperand is true, the second operand is not evaluated.
Results
a | true | false |
---|---|---|
!a | false | true |
and | a | ||
---|---|---|---|
true | false | ||
b | true | true | false |
false | false | false |
or | a | ||
---|---|---|---|
true | false | ||
b | true | true | true |
false | true | false |
Example
#include <iostream> #include <string> int main() { int n = 2; int* p = &n; // pointers are convertible to bool if( p && *p == 2 // "*p" is safe to use after "p &&" || !p && n != 2 ) // || has lower precedence than && std::cout << "true\n"; // streams are also convertible to bool std::cout << "Enter 'quit' to quit.\n"; for(std::string line; std::cout << "> " && std::getline(std::cin, line) && line != "quit"; ) ; }
Output:
true Enter 'quit' to quit. > test > quit
Standard library
Because the short-circuiting properties of operator&&
and operator||
do not apply to overloads, and because types with boolean semantics are uncommon, only two standard library classes overload these operators:
applies a unary arithmetic operator to each element of the valarray (public member function of std::valarray )
| |
applies binary operators to each element of two valarrays, or a valarray and a value (function template) | |
checks if an error has occurred (synonym of fail()) (public member function of std::basic_ios ) |
See also
Common operators | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
assignment | increment decrement |
arithmetic | logical | comparison | member access |
other |
a = b |
++a |
+a |
!a |
a == b |
a[b] |
a(...) |
Special operators | ||||||
static_cast converts one type to another related type |