Introduction to C Programming

Part 14: Operator Precedence in C

by Marshall Brain , brain@iftech.com
Interface Technologies, Inc.
(800) 224-4965, http://www.iftech.com, support@iftech.com
© Copyright 1995 by Marshall Brain. All rights reserved.
Version 2.0, 2/14/95
These tutorials are excerpted from the book "Motif Programming: The Essentials and More" , by Marshall Brain.

Operator Precedence in C

C contains many operators, and because of the way in which operator precedence works, the interactions between multiple operators can become confusing.


 

x=5+3*6; 

X receives the value 23, not 48, because in C multiplication and division have higher precedence than addition and subtraction.


 

char *a[10]; 

Is a a single pointer to an array of 10 characters, or is it an array of 10 pointers to character? Unless you know the precedence conventions in C, there is no way to find out. Similarly, in E.11 we saw that because of precedence statements such as *p.i = 10; do not work. Instead, the form (*p).i = 10; must be used to force correct precedence.

The following table from Kernigan and Richie shows the precedence hierarchy in C. The top line has the highest precedence.


Operators                                   Associativity

( [ - .                                     Left to right

! - ++  -{-  + *  &  (type-cast)  sizeof    Right to left

(in the above line, +, - and * are 

the unary forms) 

*  / %                                      Left to right

+  -                                        Left to right

<<  >>                                      Left to right

<  <=  >  >=                                Left to right

==  !=                                      Left to right

&                                           Left to right

^                                           Left to right

|                                           Left to right

&&                                          Left to right

||                                          Left to right

?:                                          Left to right

=  +=  -=  *=  /=  %=  &=  ^=  |=  <<= >>=  Right to left

,                                           Left to right 

Using this table, you can see that char *a[10]; is an array of 10 pointers to character. You can also see why the parentheses are required if (*p).i is to be handled correctly. After some practice, you will memorize most of this table, but every now and again something will not work because you have been caught by a subtle precedence problem.