I'm asking with regards to c#, but I assume its the same in most other languages.
Does anyone have a good definition of expressions and statements and what the differences are.
Thanks in advance.
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I'm asking with regards to c#, but I assume its the same in most other languages. Does anyone have a good definition of expressions and statements and what the differences are. Thanks in advance.
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Expression: Something which evaluates to a value. Example: 1+2/x The distinction was crystal-clear in the earliest general-purpose programming languages, like FORTRAN. In FORTRAN, a statement was one unit of execution, a thing that you did. The only reason it wasn't called a "line" was because sometimes it spanned multiple lines. An expression on its own couldn't do anything... you had to assign it to a variable.
is an error in FORTRAN, because it doesn't do anything. You had to do something with that expression:
The earliest popular language to blur the lines was C. The designers of C realized that no harm was done if you were allowed to evaluate an expression and throw away the result. In C, every expression could be a statement:
is a totally legit statement even though absolutely nothing will happen. Why? Because in C, expressions could have side-effects -- they could change something.
because Once you allow any expression to be a statement, you might as well allow the assignment operator (=) inside expressions. That's why C lets you do things like
This evaluates the expression x = 2 (assigning the value of 2 to x) and then passes that (the 2) to the function This blurring of expressions and statements occurs in all the C-derivatives (C, C++, C#, and Java), which still have some statements (like Functional languages like Lisp don't have statements. All they have is expressions. |
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For an explanation of important differences in composability (chainability) of expressions vs statements, my favorite reference is John Backus's Turing award paper, Can programming be liberated from the von Neumann style?. Imperative languages (Fortran, C, Java, ...) emphasize statements for structuring programs, and have expressions as a sort of after-thought. Functional languages emphasize expressions. Purely functional languages have such powerful expressions than statements can be eliminated altogether. |
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A statement is a special case of an expression, one with For example, in C# we have the very useful Trivial example - a function that checks whether a reference is null before calling onto another function:
Could the compiler deal with the possibility of A number of other answers imply that you can't chain statements like you can with expressions, but I'm not sure where this idea comes from. We can think of the |
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Some things about expression based languages: Most important: Everything returns an value There is no difference between curly brackets and braces for delimiting code blocks and expressions, since everything is an expression. This doesn't prevent lexical scoping though: A local variable could be defined for the expression in which its definition is contained and all statements contained within that, for example. In an expression based language, everything returns a value. This can be a bit strange at first -- What does Some simple examples:
A couple more complex examples:
It often requires a slight change of mindset to get the most out of an expression based language, since the fact that everything is an expression makes it possible to 'inline' a lot of things As a quick example:
is a perfectly valid replacement for the non expression-based
In some cases, the layout that expression-based code permits feels much more natural to me Of course, this can lead to madness. As part of a hobby project in an expression-based scripting language called MaxScript, I managed to come up with this monster line
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Rather than thinking of statements, I think of void expressions, hehe... Oh, I've been drinking too much. :) |
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An expression is a noun. A statement is a sentence: a verb acting on one or more nouns. |
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I would like to make a small correction to Joel's answer above. C# does not allow all expressions to be used as statements. In particular, only assignment, call, increment, and decrement expressions may be used as statements. For example, the C# compiler will flag the following code as a syntax error: 1 + 2; |
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Note that in C, "=" is actually an operator, which does two things:
Here's an extract from the ANSI C grammar. You can see that C doesn't have many different kinds of statements... the majority of statements in a program are expression statements, i.e. an expression with a semicolon at the end.
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You can find this on wikipedia, but expressions are evaluated to some value, while statements have no evaluated value. Thus, expressions can be used in statements, but not the other way around. Note that some languages (such as Lisp, and I believe Ruby, and many others) do not differentiate statement vs expression... in such languages, everything is an expression and can be chained with other expressions. |
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Simply: an expression evaluates to a value, a statement doesn't. |
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An expression is something that returns a value, whereas a statement does not. For examples:
The Big Deal between the two is that you can chain expressions together, whereas statements cannot be chained. |
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Expressions can be evaluated to get a value, whereas statements don't return a value (they're of type void). Function call expressions can also be considered statements of course, but unless the execution environment has a special built-in variable to hold the returned value, there is no way to retrieve it. Statement-oriented languages require all procedures to be a list of statements. Expression-oriented languages, which is probably all functional languages, are lists of expressions, or in tha case of LISP, one long S-expression that represents a list of expressions. Although both types can be composed, most expressions can be composed arbitrarily as long as the types match up. Each type of statement has its own way of composing other statements, if they can do that all. Foreach and if statements require either a single statment or that all subordinate statements go in a statement block, one after another, unless the substatements allow for thier own substatements. Statements can also include expressions, where an expression doesn't really include any statements. One exception, though, would be a lambda expression, which represents a function, and so can include anything a function can iclude unless the language only allows for limited lambdas, like Python's single-expression lambdas. In an expression-based language, all you need is a single expression for a function since all control structures return a value (a lot of them return NIL). There's no need for a return statement since the last-evaluated expression in the function is the return value. |
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