0
  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 ?

4
  • Wow...@RobertHarvey your comment just rippled through every answer! May 6, 2013 at 17:35
  • In my defense I was editing and adding while he commented that! :P May 6, 2013 at 17:40
  • 3
    Your comment does not match the code on the first line. 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 is return x % 2 != 0; May 6, 2013 at 17:53
  • Thank you @EricLippert you're absolutely right, edited. May 6, 2013 at 18:32

2 Answers 2

7

Because x > 0 is a boolean, not an int.

You could simplify this by using return x > 0;

1

> 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;

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