vote up 5 vote down star
1

I think the subject says it all. I always call it the "arrow operator", but I'm sure it has an official name. I quickly skimmed the C++ standard and didn't see it mentioned by name.

flag

79% accept rate
In a C99 draft, I can't find any mention of its name. It's always called "-> operator" in that doc. – Mehrdad Afshari Oct 16 at 22:44
@Mehrdad: The do call it "arrow operator" in the Index though – AndreyT Oct 16 at 23:03
2  
AndreyT: In the index, I can see "arrow operator (->)" and "pointer operator (->)" – Mehrdad Afshari Oct 16 at 23:07
@Mehrdad: Well, that gives us one more official (?) name for that operator in C :) – AndreyT Oct 16 at 23:12

10 Answers

vote up 15 vote down check

The C++ standard just calls it "arrow" (ยง5.2.5).

link|flag
First mentioned in 5.2.4, but then ubiquitously with the dot operator too. – Jonathan Leffler Oct 17 at 21:35
vote up 7 vote down

According to Wikipedia's list of operators in C and C++, it's called "member by pointer".

But to be totally honest, I've always called it "arrow". For example, if I had the code a->b, I would read that as "a arrow b".

link|flag
I read it the same way. I wonder why.... (P.S. Hi TO!) – Marc W Oct 16 at 22:42
I found the wikipedia article before I posted the question. Despite the fact that it's listed under the "name" column in the table, I'm inclined to believe that's a description, not a name. – rmeador Oct 16 at 22:53
vote up 14 vote down

Bjarne Stroustrup calls it the "structure pointer dereference" operator (TC++PL Special Edition, p. 102). In the index he refers to it as the "member access" operator.

Not sure if this is "official" but the guy did write the language, after all.

link|flag
1  
I can confirm that this is the case. (Yes, I actually went to The C++ Programming Language Special Edition and checked it out.) – Thomas Owens Oct 16 at 22:54
11  
he didn't invent C, and that's where the operator comes from. – asveikau Oct 16 at 23:04
asveikau, both of your statements are correct, but what does that have to do with the question? – John W Oct 16 at 23:06
2  
asveikau: That's true. But the same operator can have different names in different languages, even though it's the same thing. And the question is specifically about its name in C++. If anything is the answer, this is. – Thomas Owens Oct 16 at 23:07
3  
Please note that TC++PL book is not a formal and/or official source of information on C++ language. TC++PL is deliberately written to be more accessible to beginners. On a number of topics, for the sake of simplicity, it deliberatly contadicts official sources (i.e. speaking pedantically, contains deliberate errors). TC++PL is a good book, but you have to be careful when moving from TC++PL into the "official" world of C++. – AndreyT Oct 16 at 23:16
show 1 more comment
vote up 6 vote down

The official name for this operator is "class member access operator" (see 5.2.5). Although this name is attached to both '.' and '->' operators, so it's more of a group name. The '.' is also referred to as "dot operator" and '->' as "arrow operator" in the standard text.

Added later: The above applies to C++ standard. C standard refers to '->' as an "arrow operator" in the Index only. The main text of the document doesn't seem to use any name.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The ISO C standard calls it the->operator or the member-access->operator. So apparently it does not have an "official" name in C.

Personally, I just say pointer or arrow.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Its just the dit (ie not dot).

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Dereference Pointer

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I've heard it referred to a few different ways, was never sure any one in particular was more official than another.

  • Member Selection Operator
  • Pointer Dereferencing Operator
  • "the arrow thingy"

and I'm sure there are others. personally I'm less concerned about what its called in a book or an official spec and more concerned that people know what I mean when I refer to it, so in my opinion "arrow thingy" is the best name for it since its the easiest to understand clearly what is being referred to.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

These terms are in no way official, but I'd call the dot operator the direct (class) member access operator and the arrow operator the indirect (class) member access operator to clarify their relationship with the indirection operator.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The index to ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (the C99 standard) has three index entries for 'arrow operator' (in its own right, and under 'union' and 'struct'), and refers to section 6.5.2.3 (Structure and union members, in the section on Postfix operators). However, there is no mention of 'arrow' in section 6.5.2.3 or anywhere else in the standard than the index (every other appearance of 'arrow' is as part of 'narrow' or a derivative of narrow).

Arrow is therefore semi-officially sanctioned in the C standard (the index is not normative or standard setting, though).

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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