Wednesday, 24 May 2017

c++ - Confused by use of double logical not (!!) operator




I have some C++ code that makes extensive use of !!. I'm kinda baffled because as far as I know !! is not a operator on it's own but two ! after each other. So that would mean that !!foo is the same as just foo.



Is there any place and or reason when !! actually makes sense? I was thinking about if it could perhaps have a bit wise meaning? So you first perform some bit wise operation on foo and then ! on the result? But I don't seem to remember ! being used as a bit wise operator and don't seem to find any reference telling me it is either. As far as I can tell ! in only used as a logical operator and in that case



!!foo == foo


Answer



It is not as simple as double negation. For example, if you have x == 5, and then apply two ! operators (!!x), it will become 1 - so, it is used for normalizing boolean values in {0, 1} range.




Note that you can use zero as boolean false, and non-zero for boolean true, but you might need to normalize your result into a 0 or 1, and that is when !! is useful.



It is the same as x != 0 ? 1 : 0.



Also, note that this will not be true if foo is not in {0, 1} set:



!!foo == foo



#include 


using namespace std;

int main()
{
int foo = 5;

if(foo == !!foo)
{
cout << "foo == !!foo" << endl;

}
else
{
cout << "foo != !!foo" << endl;
}



return 0;
}



Prints foo != !!foo.


No comments:

Post a Comment

c++ - Does curly brackets matter for empty constructor?

Those brackets declare an empty, inline constructor. In that case, with them, the constructor does exist, it merely does nothing more than t...