- ES6 - Discussion
- ES6 - Useful Resources
- ES6 - Quick Guide
- ES9 - New Features
- ES8 - New Features
- ES7 - New Features
- ES6 - Browsers
- ES6 - Image Map
- ES6 - Debugging
- ES6 - Multimedia
- ES6 - Animation
- ES6 - Validations
- ES6 - Proxy API
- ES6 - Reflect API
- ES6 - Object Extensions
- ES6 - Error Handling
- ES6 - Modules
- ES6 - Promises
- ES6 - Maps And Sets
- ES6 - Classes
- ES6 - Collections
- ES6 - Iterator
- ES6 - HTML DOM
- ES6 - RegExp
- ES6 - Math
- ES6 - Date
- ES6 - Arrays
- ES6 - New String Methods
- ES6 - Symbol
- ES6 - Strings
- ES6 - Boolean
- ES6 - Number
- ES6 - Objects
- ES6 - Page Printing
- ES6 - Void Keyword
- ES6 - Dialog Boxes
- ES6 - Page Redirect
- ES6 - Cookies
- ES6 - Events
- ES6 - Functions
- ES6 - Loops
- ES6 - Decision Making
- ES6 - Operators
- ES6 - Variables
- ES6 - Syntax
- ES6 - Environment
- ES6 - Overview
- ES6 - Home
Selected Reading
- Who is Who
- Computer Glossary
- HR Interview Questions
- Effective Resume Writing
- Questions and Answers
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
ES6 - Operators
An expression is a special kind of statement that evaluates to a value. Every expression is composed of −
Operands − Represents the data.
Operator − Defines how the operands will be processed to produce a value.
Consider the following expression- 2 + 3. Here in the expression, 2 and 3 are operands and the symbol + (plus) is the operator. JavaScript supports the following types of operators −
Arithmetic operators
Logical operators
Relational operators
Bitwise operators
Assignment operators
Ternary/conditional operators
String operators
Type operators
The void operator
Arithmetic Operators
Assume the values in variables a and b are 10 and 5 respectively.
Operator | Function | Example |
---|---|---|
+ | Addition
Returns the sum of the operands. |
a + b is 15 |
- | Subtraction
Returns the difference of the values. |
a-b is 5 |
* | Multippcation
Returns the product of the values. |
a*b is 50 |
/ | Division
Performs a spanision operation and returns the quotient. |
a/b is 2 |
% | Modulus
Performs a spanision and returns the remainder. |
a%b is 0 |
++ | Increment
Increments the value of the variable by one. |
a++ is 11 |
-- | Decrement
Decrements the value of the variable by one. |
a-- is 9 |
Relational Operators
Relational operators test or define the kind of relationship between two entities. Relational operators return a boolean value, i.e. true/false.
Assume the value of A is 10 and B is 20.
Operators | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
> | Greater than | (A > B) is False |
< | Lesser than | (A < B) is True |
>= | Greater than or equal to | (A >= B) is False |
<= | Lesser than or equal to | (A <= B) is True |
== | Equapty | (A == B) is False |
!= | Not Equal | (A!= B) is True |
Logical Operators
Logical operators are used to combine two or more conditions. Logical operators, too, return a Boolean value. Assume the value of variable A is 10 and B is 20.
.
Operators | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
&& |
And
The operator returns true only if all the expressions specified return true. |
(A > 10 && B > 10) is False |
|| |
Or
The operator returns true if at least one of the expressions specified return true. |
(A > 10 || B > 10) is True |
! |
Not
The operator returns the inverse of the expression’s result. For E.g.: !(7>5) returns false. |
!(A > 10) is True |
Bitwise Operators
JavaScript supports the following bitwise operators. The following table summarizes JavaScript s bitwise operators.
.
Operators | Usage | Description |
---|---|---|
Bitwise AND | a & b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of both operands are ones |
Bitwise OR | a | b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of either or both operands are ones |
Bitwise XOR | a^b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of either but not both operands are ones |
Bitwise NOT | ~ a | Inverts the bits of its operand |
Left shift | a << b | Shifts a in binary representation b (< 32) bits to the left, shifting in zeroes from the right |
Sign-propagating right shift | a >> b | Shifts a in binary representation b (< 32) bits to the right, discarding bits shifted off |
Zero-fill right shift | a >>> b | Shifts a in binary representation b (< 32) bits to the right, discarding bits shifted off, and shifting in zeroes from the left |
Assignment Operators
The following table summarizes Assignment operators.
.
Sr.No | Operator & Description |
---|---|
1 |
= (Simple Assignment) Assigns values from the right side operand to the left side operand. Example − C = A + B will assign the value of A + B into C |
2 |
+= (Add and Assignment) It adds the right operand to the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Example − C += A is equivalent to C = C + A |
3 |
-= (Subtract and Assignment) It subtracts the right operand from the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Example C -= A is equivalent to C = C - A |
4 |
*= (Multiply and Assignment) It multippes the right operand with the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Example C *= A is equivalent to C = C * A |
5 |
/= (Divide and Assignment) It spanides the left operand with the right operand and assigns the result to the left operand. |
Note − The same logic apppes to Bitwise operators, so they will become <<=, >>=, >>=, &=, |= and ^=.
Miscellaneous Operators
Following are some of the miscellaneous operators.
The negation operator (-)
Changes the sign of a value. The following program is an example of the same.
var x = 4 var y = -x; console.log("value of x: ",x); //outputs 4 console.log("value of y: ",y); //outputs -4
The following output is displayed on successful execution of the above program.
value of x: 4 value of y: -4
String Operators : Concatenation operator (+)
The + operator when appped to strings appends the second string to the first. The following program helps to understand this concept.
var msg = "hello"+"world" console.log(msg)
The following output is displayed on successful execution of the above program.
helloworld
The concatenation operation doesn’t add a space between the strings. Multiple strings can be concatenated in a single statement.
Conditional Operator (?)
This operator is used to represent a conditional expression. The conditional operator is also sometimes referred to as the ternary operator. Following is the syntax.
Test ? expr1 : expr2
Where,
Test − Refers to the conditional expression
expr1 − Value returned if the condition is true
expr2 − Value returned if the condition is false
Example
var num = -2 var result = num > 0 ?"positive":"non-positive" console.log(result)
Line 2 checks whether the value in the variable num is greater than zero. If num is set to a value greater than zero, it returns the string “positive” else a “non-positive” string is returned.
The following output is displayed on successful execution of the above program.
non-positive
typeof operator
It is a unary operator. This operator returns the data type of the operand. The following table psts the data types and the values returned by the typeof operator in JavaScript.
Type | String Returned by typeof |
---|---|
Number | "number" |
String | "string" |
Boolean | "boolean" |
Object | "object" |
The following example code displays the number as the output.
var num = 12 console.log(typeof num); //output: number
The following output is displayed on successful execution of the above code.
number
Spread Operator
ES6 provides a new operator called the spread operator. The spread operator is represented by three dots “...” . The spread operator converts an array into inspanidual array elements.
Spread operator and function
The following example illustrates the use of spread operators in a function
<script> function addThreeNumbers(a,b,c){ return a+b+c; } const arr = [10,20,30] console.log( sum is : ,addThreeNumbers(...arr)) console.log( sum is ,addThreeNumbers(...[1,2,3])) </script>
The output of the above code will be as seen below −
sum is : 60 sum is 6
Spread operator and Array copy and concat
The spread operator can be used to copy one array into another. It can also be used to concatenate two or more arrays. This is shown in the example below −
Example
<script> //copy array using spread operator let source_arr = [10,20,30] let dest_arr = [...source_arr] console.log(dest_arr) //concatenate two arrays let arr1 = [10,20,30] let arr2 =[40,50,60] let arr3 = [...arr1,...arr2] console.log(arr3) </script>
The output of the above code will be as stated below −
[10, 20, 30] [10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60]
Spread Operator and Object copy and concatenation
The spread operator can be used to copy one object into another. It can also be used to concatenate two or more objects. This is shown in the example below −
<script> //copy object let student1 ={firstName: Mohtashim ,company: TutorialsPoint } let student2 ={...student1} console.log(student2) //concatenate objects let student3 = {lastName: Mohammad } let student4 = {...student1,...student3} console.log(student4) </script>
The output of the above code will be as given below −
{firstName: "Mohtashim", company: "TutorialsPoint"} {firstName: "Mohtashim", company: "TutorialsPoint", lastName: "Mohammad"}Advertisements