It is impossible to overload operator+() for built-in types (int
, etc). So, if a
and b
are both of type int
with values 5
and 6
respectively, it is not possible to make a + b
give a value of 1
.
However, it is possible to do so for user defined types (classes, enums, etc).
For example, with a class type named MyInt
it is possible to implement an operator+(), as either a member function that accepts one argument, or as a non-member function that accepts two.
Once you can implement an operator+()
, you can define it to give any result you like. Your class (which I'm calling MyInt
for sake of discussion) would probably also need a set of other functions as well (e.g. constructors, other numeric operators).
Note that - although technically possible - it is considered really poor practice to make numeric types that behave counter-intuitively. Making an numeric type with an addition operator that does something different from addition is counter-intuitive to most people. Including yourself, if maintaining your code in a few years from now.
<<
and+
are pretty different. That said, this has to be a dupe of something. While someone hunts up that dupe, Give this a read: en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/operators Particularly about half way down under Binary arithmetic operators. More good reading here: isocpp.org/wiki/faq/operator-overloading