In the C and C++ programming languages, the comma operator (represented by the token ,
) is a binary operator that evaluates its first operand and discards the result, and then evaluates the second operand and returns this value (and type); there is a sequence point between these evaluations.
The use of the comma token as an operator is distinct from its use in function calls and definitions, variable declarations, enum declarations, and similar constructs, where it acts as a separator.
The comma operator separates expressions (which have value) in a way analogous to how the semicolon terminates statements, and sequences of expressions are enclosed in parentheses analogously to how sequences of statements are enclosed in braces:[1](a, b, c)
is a sequence of expressions, separated by commas, which evaluates to the last expression c
while {a; b; c;}
is a sequence of statements, and does not evaluate to any value. A comma can only occur between two expressions – commas separate expressions – unlike the semicolon, which occurs at the end of a (non-block) statement – semicolons terminate statements.
The comma operator has the lowest precedence of any C operator, and acts as a sequence point. In a combination of commas and semicolons, semicolons have lower precedence than commas, as semicolons separate statements but commas occur within statements, which accords with their use as ordinary punctuation: a, b; c, d
is grouped as (a, b); (c, d)
because these are two separate statements.
In this example, the differing behavior between the second and third lines is due to the comma operator having lower precedence than assignment. The last example differs as well since the return expression must be fully evaluated before the function can return.
/**
* Commas act as separators in this line, not as an operator.
* Results: a=1, b=2, c=3, i=0
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3, i=0;
/**
* Assigns value of b into i.
* Commas act as separators in the first line and as an operator in the second line.
* Results: a=1, b=2, c=3, i=2
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
int i = (a, b);
/**
* Assigns value of a into i.
* Equivalent to: int i = a; int b;
* Commas act as separators in both lines.
* The braces on the second line avoid variable redeclaration in the same block,
* which would cause a compilation error.
* The second b declared is given no initial value.
* Results: a=1, b=2, c=3, i=1
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
{ int i = a, b; }
/**
* Increases value of a by 2, then assigns value of resulting operation a + b into i.
* Commas act as separators in the first line and as an operator in the second line.
* Results: a=3, b=2, c=3, i=5
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
int i = (a += 2, a + b);
/**
* Increases value of a by 2, then stores value of a to i, and discards unused
* values of resulting operation a + b.
* Equivalent to: ((i = a) += 2), a + b;
* Commas act as separators in the first line and as an operator in the third line.
* Results: a=3, b=2, c=3, i=3
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
int i;
i = a += 2, a + b;
/**
* Assigns value of a into i.
* Commas act as separators in both lines.
* The braces on the second line avoid variable redeclaration in the same block,
* which would cause a compilation error.
* The second b and c declared are given no initial value.
* Results: a=1, b=2, c=3, i=1
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
{ int i = a, b, c; }
/**
* Commas act as separators in the first line and as an operator in the second line.
* Assigns value of c into i, discarding the unused a and b values.
* Results: a=1, b=2, c=3, i=3
*/
int a=1, b=2, c=3;
int i = (a, b, c);
/**
* Returns 6, not 4, since comma operator sequence points following the keyword
* return are considered a single expression evaluating to rvalue of final
* subexpression c=6.
* Commas act as operators in this line.
*/
return a=4, b=5, c=6;
/**
* Returns 3, not 1, for same reason as previous example.
* Commas act as operators in this line.
*/
return 1, 2, 3;
/**
* Returns 3, not 1, still for same reason as above. This example works as it does
* because return is a keyword, not a function call. Even though compilers will
* allow for the construct return(value), the parentheses are only relative to "value"
* and have no special effect on the return keyword.
* Return simply gets an expression and here the expression is "(1), 2, 3".
* Commas act as operators in this line.
*/
return(1), 2, 3;
The comma operator has relatively limited use cases. Because it discards its first operand, it is generally only useful where the first operand has desirable side effects that must be sequenced before the second operand. Further, because it is rarely used outside of specific idioms, and easily mistaken with other commas or the semicolon, it is potentially confusing and error-prone. Nevertheless, there are certain circumstances where it is commonly used, notably in for loops and in SFINAE.[2] For embedded systems which may have limited debugging capabilities, the comma operator can be used in combination with a macro to seamlessly override a function call, to insert code just before the function call.
The most common use is to allow multiple assignment statements without using a block statement, primarily in the initialization and the increment expressions of a for loop. This is the only idiomatic use in elementary C programming. In the following example, the order of the loop's initializers is significant:
void rev(char *s, size_t len)
{
char *first;
for (first = s, s += len; s >= first; --s) {
putchar(*s);
}
}
An alternative solution to this problem in other languages is parallel assignment, which allows multiple assignments to occur within a single statement, and also uses a comma, though with different syntax and semantics. This is used in Go in its analogous for loop.[3]
Outside of for loop initializers (which have a special use of semicolons), the comma might be used instead of a semicolon, particularly when the statements in question function similarly to a loop increment (e.g. at the end of a while loop):
++p, ++q;
++p; ++q;
The comma can be used in preprocessor macros to perform multiple operations in the space of a single syntactic expression.
One common use is to provide custom error messages in failed assertions. This is done by passing a parenthesized expression list to the assert
macro, where the first expression is an error string and the second expression is the condition being asserted. The assert
macro outputs its argument verbatim on an assertion failure. The following is an example:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <assert.h>
int main ( void )
{
int i;
for (i=0; i<=9; i++)
{
assert( ( "i is too big!", i <= 4 ) );
printf("i = %i\n", i);
}
return 0;
}
Output:
i = 0 i = 1 i = 2 i = 3 i = 4 assert: assert.c:6: test_assert: Assertion `( "i is too big!", i <= 4 )' failed. Aborted
However the assert macro is usually disabled in production code, so use it only for debug purposes.
The comma can be used within a condition (of an if, while, do while, or for) to allow auxiliary computations, particularly calling a function and using the result, with block scoping:
if (y = f(x), y > x) {
... // statements involving x and y
}
A similar idiom exists in Go, where the syntax of the if statement explicitly allows an optional statement.[4]
The comma can be used in return statements, to assign to a global variable or out parameter (passed by reference). This idiom suggests that the assignments are part of the return, rather than auxiliary assignments in a block that terminates with the actual return. For example, in setting a global error number:
if (failure)
return (errno = EINVAL, -1);
This can be written more verbosely as:
if (failure) {
errno = EINVAL;
return -1;
}
For brevity, the comma can be used to avoid a block and associated braces, as in:
if (x == 1) y = 2, z = 3;
if (x == 1)
y = 2, z = 3;
instead of:
if (x == 1) {y = 2; z = 3;}
if (x == 1) {
y = 2; z = 3;
}
In the OCaml and Ruby programming languages, the semicolon (";") is used for this purpose. JavaScript[5] and Perl[6] utilize the comma operator in the same way C/C++ does. In Java, the comma is a separator used to separate elements in a list in various contexts.[7] It is not an operator and does not evaluate to the last element in the list.[8]
Two expressions separated by a comma are evaluated left to right. The left operand is always evaluated, and all side effects are completed before the right operand is evaluated.
You can use the comma operator when you want to include multiple expressions in a location that requires a single expression.
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 15:15:30
Source: Wikipedia.org