What is an operator?
Simple answer can be given using expression 4 + 5 is equal to 9. Here 4 and 5 are called
operands and + is called operator. JavaScript language supports following type
of operators.
§
Arithmetic Operators
§
Comparision Operators
§
Logical (or Relational) Operators
§
Assignment Operators
§
Conditional (or ternary) Operators
Lets have a look on all operators one by one.
The Arithmatic Operators:
There are following arithmatic operators supported by JavaScript
language:
Assume variable A holds 10 and variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
+
|
Adds
two operands
|
A + B
will give 30
|
-
|
Subtracts
second operand from the first
|
A - B
will give -10
|
*
|
Multiply
both operands
|
A * B
will give 200
|
/
|
Divide
numerator by denumerator
|
B / A
will give 2
|
%
|
Modulus
Operator and remainder of after an integer division
|
B % A
will give 0
|
++
|
Increment
operator, increases integer value by one
|
A++
will give 11
|
--
|
Decrement
operator, decreases integer value by one
|
A--
will give 9
|
Note: Addition
operator (+) works
for Numeric as well as Strings. e.g. "a" + 10 will give
"a10".
The Comparison Operators:
There are following comparison operators supported by JavaScript
language
Assume variable A holds 10 and variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
==
|
Checks
if the value of two operands are equal or not, if yes then condition becomes
true.
|
(A ==
B) is not true.
|
!=
|
Checks
if the value of two operands are equal or not, if values are not equal then
condition becomes true.
|
(A !=
B) is true.
|
>
|
Checks
if the value of left operand is greater than the value of right operand, if
yes then condition becomes true.
|
(A >
B) is not true.
|
<
|
Checks
if the value of left operand is less than the value of right operand, if yes
then condition becomes true.
|
(A <
B) is true.
|
>=
|
Checks
if the value of left operand is greater than or equal to the value of right
operand, if yes then condition becomes true.
|
(A
>= B) is not true.
|
<=
|
Checks
if the value of left operand is less than or equal to the value of right operand,
if yes then condition becomes true.
|
(A
<= B) is true.
|
The Logical Operators:
There are following logical operators supported by JavaScript
language
Assume variable A holds 10 and variable B holds 20 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
&&
|
Called
Logical AND operator. If both the operands are non zero then then condition
becomes true.
|
(A
&& B) is true.
|
||
|
Called
Logical OR Operator. If any of the two operands are non zero then then
condition becomes true.
|
(A ||
B) is true.
|
!
|
Called
Logical NOT Operator. Use to reverses the logical state of its operand. If a
condition is true then Logical NOT operator will make false.
|
!(A
&& B) is false.
|
The Bitwise Operators:
There are following bitwise operators supported by JavaScript
language
Assume variable A holds 2 and variable B holds 3 then:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
&
|
Called
Bitwise AND operator. It performs a Boolean AND operation on each bit of its
integer arguments.
|
(A
& B) is 2 .
|
|
|
Called
Bitwise OR Operator. It performs a Boolean OR operation on each bit of its
integer arguments.
|
(A | B)
is 3.
|
^
|
Called
Bitwise XOR Operator. It performs a Boolean exclusive OR operation on each
bit of its integer arguments. Exclusive OR means that either operand one is
true or operand two is true, but not both.
|
(A ^ B)
is 1.
|
~
|
Called
Bitwise NOT Operator. It is a is a unary operator and operates by reversing
all bits in the operand.
|
(~B) is
-4 .
|
<<
|
Called
Bitwise Shift Left Operator. It moves all bits in its first operand to the
left by the number of places specified in the second operand. New bits are
filled with zeros. Shifting a value left by one position is equivalent to
multiplying by 2, shifting two positions is equivalent to multiplying by 4,
etc.
|
(A
<< 1) is 4.
|
>>
|
Called
Bitwise Shift Right with Sign Operator. It moves all bits in its first
operand to the right by the number of places specified in the second operand.
The bits filled in on the left depend on the sign bit of the original
operand, in order to preserve the sign of the result. If the first operand is
positive, the result has zeros placed in the high bits; if the first operand
is negative, the result has ones placed in the high bits. Shifting a value
right one place is equivalent to dividing by 2 (discarding the remainder),
shifting right two places is equivalent to integer division by 4, and so on.
|
(A
>> 1) is 1.
|
>>>
|
Called
Bitwise Shift Right with Zero Operator. This operator is just like the
>> operator, except that the bits shifted in on the left are always
zero,
|
(A
>>> 1) is 1.
|
The Assignment Operators:
There are following assignment operators supported by JavaScript
language:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
=
|
Simple
assignment operator, Assigns values from right side operands to left side
operand
|
C = A +
B will assigne value of A + B into C
|
+=
|
Add AND
assignment operator, It adds right operand to the left operand and assign the
result to left operand
|
C += A
is equivalent to C = C + A
|
-=
|
Subtract
AND assignment operator, It subtracts right operand from the left operand and
assign the result to left operand
|
C -= A
is equivalent to C = C - A
|
*=
|
Multiply
AND assignment operator, It multiplies right operand with the left operand
and assign the result to left operand
|
C *= A
is equivalent to C = C * A
|
/=
|
Divide
AND assignment operator, It divides left operand with the right operand and
assign the result to left operand
|
C /= A
is equivalent to C = C / A
|
%=
|
Modulus
AND assignment operator, It takes modulus using two operands and assign the
result to left operand
|
C %= A
is equivalent to C = C % A
|
Note: Same
logic applies to Bitwise operators so they will become like <<=,
>>=, >>=, &=, |= and ^=.
Miscellaneous Operator
The Conditional Operator
(?
There is an oprator called conditional operator. This first
evaluates an expression for a true or false value and then execute one of the
two given statements depending upon the result of the evaluation. The
conditioanl operator has this syntax:
Operator
|
Description
|
Example
|
? :
|
Conditional
Expression
|
If
Condition is true ? Then value X : Otherwise value Y
|
The typeof Operator
The typeof is
a unary operator that is placed before its single operand, which can be of any
type. Its value is a string indicating the data type of the operand.
The typeof operator
evaluates to "number", "string", or "boolean" if
its operand is a number, string, or boolean value and returns true or false
based on the evaluation.
Here is the list of return values for the typeof Operator:
Type
|
String Returned by typeof
|
Number
|
"number"
|
String
|
"string"
|
Boolean
|
"boolean"
|
Object
|
"object"
|
Function
|
"function"
|
Undefined
|
"undefined"
|
Null
|
"object"
|
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