The +
operator is the unary plus operator; it returns its numeric argument unchanged. So ++x
is parsed as +(+(x))
, and gives x
unchanged (as long as x
contains a number):
>>> ++5
5
>>> ++"hello"
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: bad operand type for unary +: 'str'
If +
is called on an object of a user-defined class, the __pos__
special method will be called if it exists; otherwise, TypeError
will be raised as above.
To confirm this we can use the ast module to show how Python parses the expression:
import ast
print(ast.dump(ast.parse('++x', mode='eval')))
Expression(body=UnaryOp(op=UAdd(), operand=UnaryOp(op=UAdd(), operand=Name(id='x', ctx=Load()))))