return x%2 != 0; // Return true if x is odd. => ok
return x>0 == 1; // Return true if x > 0 => this won't work
Can someone tell me why the second line isn't working ? Why can't I use the ">"
, "="
, "<"
... operators ?
Because x > 0
is a boolean, not an int.
You could simplify this by using return x > 0;
>
is comparison operator which returns a boolean value.
Simply
public bool FooBar(int x)
{
return x > 0;
}
Of all the operators you asked, all will work except =
. It is an assignment operator in C#. So you can't do
return x = 1;
but you can do
return x == 1;
OR
return x < 1;
return x % 2 == 1;
does not return whether x is odd or not; it returns whether x is both positive and odd. The correct code isreturn x % 2 != 0;