9

The following code sample prints 1.5.

float a = 3;
float b = 2;
a /= b;
System.out.println(a);

I don't understand what the /= operator does. What is it supposed to represent?

0

7 Answers 7

16

It's a combination division-plus-assignment operator.

a /= b;

means divide a by b and put the result in a.

There are similar operators for addition, subtraction, and multiplication: +=, -= and *=.

%= will do modulus.

>>= and <<= will do bit shifting.

0
4

It is an abbreviation for x = x / y (x /= y). What it does is it divides the variable to be asigned by the left hand side of it and stores it in the right hand side. You can always change:

x = x / y

to

x /= y

You can do this with most other operators like * / + and -. I am not sure about bitwise operators though.

1

a/=b; implies that divide a with b and put the result into a

1

A/=B means the same thing as A=(A/B)

Java (copying from C) has a whole set of operators X op = Y meaning X=X op Y, for op being any of: + - * / % & | ^

0
1

X/=Y it is same as X=X/Y.
Also you can try the same thing for these operators + - * %

0

As most people here have already said, x/=y is used as a shortened form of x=x\y and the same works for other operators like +=, -=, *=, %=. There's even further shortcuts for + and - where x++ and x-- represent x=x+1 and x=x-1 respectively.

One thing that hasn't been mentioned is that if this is used in some function call or conditional test the original value is used then replaced, letting you do the iterator for a while loop inside the call that uses that iterator, or write a true mod function using the remainder operator much more concisely:

public int mod(int a, int b){
    return ((a%=b)>=0?a:a+b);
}

which is a much shorter way of writing:

public int mod(int a, int b){
    a = a % b
    if (a>=0){
        return a;
    }
    return a+b;
}
-3

You could say a = a / b OR (for short) say a /= b

1
  • Your answer is not adding anything that was not already suggested by the numerous older answers. Apr 7, 2021 at 18:07

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.