27

As I mentioned in the title,

What is the difference between a += b and a =+ b , also a++ and ++a ? I'm little confused

1
  • 8
    In really old versions of C, =+ was equivalent of +=. Dropped for obvious reasons. Feb 24, 2011 at 6:19

9 Answers 9

40

a += b is equivalent to a = a + b

a = +b is equivalent to a = b

a++ and ++a both increment a by 1. The difference is that a++ returns the value of a before the increment whereas ++a returns the value after the increment.

That is:

a = 10;
b = ++a; //a = 11, b = 11

a = 10;
b = a++; //a = 11, b = 10
1
  • 1
    +1. Re: "a += b is equivalent to a = a + b": A small pedantic nit: if the evaluation of a involves side-effects, then those happen only once. For example, in foo().x += y, the foo method is called only once, whereas in foo().x = foo().x + y, it's called twice (and it could even return a different instance each time, in which case the x that's being assigned to is different from the x that's being read from).
    – ruakh
    Nov 6, 2020 at 1:27
18

a += b is equivalent to a = a + b

a = +b is equivalent to a = b

a++ is postfix increment and ++a is prefix increment. They do not differ when used in a standalone statement, however their evaluation result differs: a++ returns the value of a before incrementing, while ++a after. I.e.

int a = 1;
int b = a++; // result: b == 1, a == 2
int c = ++a; // result: c == 3, a == 3
6

Others have covered the answers to most of your questions. However, they are missing a bit about your second example.

a = +b assigns the value of +b to a. The "unary plus" is a no-operation for numeric types, but a compile-time error on other types of objects (for example, you can't use it with a string). It is provided mainly so you can write numbers with a leading + sign when you want to. This is never necessary, but it can improve readability in some circumstances.

4

Java operators

a += b;  // a = a + b
a = +b;  // a = b
a++;     // a = a + 1 (returning a if used inside some expression)
++a;     // a = a + 1 (returning a + 1 if used inside some expression)
4

a+=b ========> a=a+b

a=+b ========> a=b

++a will increment the variable and return the incremented value.

a++ will increment the variable but return the value before it was incremented.

0
2
a += b <=> a = a + b
a =+ b <=> a = b
a++ // post increment, means the value gets used, and after that, a is incremented by one
++a //pre increment, a is incremented by one before the value is used
2

a++ first reads the value of a and then increments its value. ++a first increments the value and then reads it. You can see easily the difference printing them.

int a = 4;
System.out.println(a++); // prints 4, after printing, a == 5
System.out.println(++a); // first increments a, then reads its value (6), and that's what got printed.

for a += b and a = +b, @Péter Török has answered clearly before.

1
  • a += b; is equivalent to a = a + b;.

  • a =+ b; is equivalent to a = +b;. This means +b (positive) is assigned to variable a.

  • a++ is post increment of variable a, meaning the value of the variable is used before incrementing by 1.

  • ++a is pre-increment of variable a, meaning the value of the variable is incremented by 1 and used after increment.

-1

You can find the difference here There are examples for all the cases you mention!

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