public class Latihan
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
int a = 0;
System.out.println(++a + ++a * ++a);
}
}
The output is 7. What is happening here? Please explain me. I'm still a newbie in programming.
This is what happened:
++a + ++a * ++a
1 + 2 * 3
1 + 6
7
EDIT 2
++a + a++ * ++a
1 + 1 * 3
1 + 3
4
++a
means increment the value of a
before using it, thus the pre-incrementa++
means use the value of a
then increment it, thus the post-increment++a means "increment the value of a, returning the new (incremented) value". So, yes, the increment occurs before you have the value available to work with.
If that isn't what you wanted...
a++ means "increment the value of a, returning the previous (un-incremented) value".
int a=0;
System.out.println(++a); /* will print 1, and leave a set to 1 */
a=0;
System.out.println(a++); /* will print 0, and leave a set to 1 */
Similarly for the '--a' and 'a--' (decrement) operators.
Java expressions don't get quite as hairy as C expressions could, since Java doesn't have pointer manipulation operators, but there are still enough operators to make precedence confusing at times. That's especially true when side-effects are involved, as in this case. When in doubt -- or when you think the next person to read the code might be in doubt -- you may want to pull the increment out of the expression and perform it separately.
1 + 2 * 3
is not7
?