I don't understand the concept of postfix and prefix increment or decrement. Can anyone give a better explanation?
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2Possible duplicate of What is the difference between ++i and i++– TylerHJul 27, 2016 at 21:56
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or perhaps Incrementing in C++ - When to use x++ or ++x? (or, most likely, 10s of others)– underscore_dSep 29, 2018 at 22:52
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If you understand Hindi :), this explains very clearly youtube.com/watch?v=yRt-zYFJIvE– DeepakJun 15, 2020 at 19:31
14 Answers
All four answers so far are incorrect, in that they assert a specific order of events.
Believing that "urban legend" has led many a novice (and professional) astray, to wit, the endless stream of questions about Undefined Behavior in expressions.
So.
For the built-in C++ prefix operator,
++x
increments x
and produces (as the expression's result) x
as an lvalue, while
x++
increments x
and produces (as the expression's result) the original value of x
.
In particular, for x++
there is no no time ordering implied for the increment and production of original value of x
. The compiler is free to emit machine code that produces the original value of x
, e.g. it might be present in some register, and that delays the increment until the end of the expression (next sequence point).
Folks who incorrectly believe the increment must come first, and they are many, often conclude from that certain expressions must have well defined effect, when they actually have Undefined Behavior.
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10@Sa'me Smd: "lvalue" is essentially a reference to an object that has storage. it's terminology stemming from early C, where an assignment needed an lvalue on the left side. Dec 15, 2010 at 1:35
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5You're right about the mechanics but I think you're wrong to say others and incorrect on the conceptual level. The mechanics are just practicalities of trying to implement the concept. 'Post' means after - conceptually, the increment is done afterwards. The whole concept of 'sequence' as in 'sequence point' implies an order, and the UB comes from misunderstanding how sequence points work, not from 'misunderstanding' the meaning of 'pre' and 'post'.– sje397Dec 15, 2010 at 1:48
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3So what would an expression like
(i++ > 0) && someProperty(myArray[i])
do? Like if i=5, would it be callingsomeProperty
withmyArray[5]
ormyArray[6]
? Nov 12, 2012 at 1:39 -
6@AJMansfield: In C++03 terms the built-in
&&
introduces a sequence point (C++03 §1.9/18). In C++11 terms the left hand operand expression of the built-in&&
is sequenced before the right hand operand expression (C++11 §5.14/2). This means that if the call is made, it's made withi
value 6. Nov 12, 2012 at 4:09 -
4@AJMansfield: The
&&
and||
are unique in providing short-circuit evaluation (and hence sequence points). The ternary choice operator is a bit like that, in that it guarantees that the choice not taken is not evaluated. But for arithmetic operators you just get Undefined Behavior when you both modify and use a variable in the same expression. I think, but not sure, that this is so also for all other operators. It is anyway the best assumption, and it's not good to write code that relies on some subtle special case that few if any programmers know about. ;-) Nov 13, 2012 at 0:09
int i, x;
i = 2;
x = ++i;
// now i = 3, x = 3
i = 2;
x = i++;
// now i = 3, x = 2
'Post' means after - that is, the increment is done after the variable is read. 'Pre' means before - so the variable value is incremented first, then used in the expression.
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"the increment is done after the variable is read". I used to think I understand post- and prefix increment, but now you got me confused! Dec 15, 2010 at 0:52
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Why is that confusing? We're talking about the concept of 'pre' and 'post' increment. Those prefixes do mean before and after.– sje397Dec 15, 2010 at 1:48
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7The "pre" and "post" in "preincrement" and "postincrement" refer to the position of the operator with respect to the operand. They do not imply any temporal ordering between when the increment occurs with respect to when the variable is read. Dec 20, 2010 at 15:16
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2@James: I understand your point - but to illustrate, imagine how confusing it would be if the function of the operators was reversed. I know that technically, there is no implication of temporal ordering, but there is definitely a conceptual mapping of the post increment to the idea of 'incrementing after use'.– sje397Dec 20, 2010 at 23:47
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@sje397 why for example int a = 5; cout << a++; prints only 5 instead of 6 according to your example?– RaHuLFeb 11, 2020 at 13:17
The difference between the postfix increment, x++
, and the prefix increment, ++x
, is precisely in how the two operators evaluate their operands. The postfix increment conceptually copies the operand in memory, increments the original operand and finally yields the value of the copy. I think this is best illustrated by implementing the operator in code:
int operator ++ (int& n) // postfix increment
{
int tmp = n;
n = n + 1;
return tmp;
}
The above code will not compile because you can't re-define operators for primitive types. The compiler also can't tell here we're defining a postfix operator rather than prefix, but let's pretend this is correct and valid C++. You can see that the postfix operator indeed acts on its operand, but it returns the old value prior to the increment, so the result of the expression x++
is the value prior to the increment. x
, however, is incremented.
The prefix increment increments its operand as well, but it yields the value of the operand after the increment:
int& operator ++ (int& n)
{
n = n + 1;
return n;
}
This means that the expression ++x
evaluates to the value of x
after the increment.
It's easy to think that the expression ++x
is therefore equivalent to the assignmnet (x=x+1)
. This is not precisely so, however, because an increment is an operation that can mean different things in different contexts. In the case of a simple primitive integer, indeed ++x
is substitutable for (x=x+1)
. But in the case of a class-type, such as an iterator of a linked list, a prefix increment of the iterator most definitely does not mean "adding one to the object".
No one has answered the question: Why is this concept confusing?
As an undergrad Computer Science major it took me awhile to understand this because of the way I read the code.
The following is not correct!
x = y++
X is equal to y post increment. Which would logically seem to mean X is equal to the value of Y after the increment operation is done. Post meaning after.
or
x = ++y
X is equal to y pre-increment. Which would logically seem to mean X is equal to the value of Y before the increment operation is done. Pre meaning before.
The way it works is actually the opposite. This concept is confusing because the language is misleading. In this case we cannot use the words to define the behavior.
x=++y is actually read as X is equal to the value of Y after the increment.
x=y++ is actually read as X is equal to the value of Y before the increment.
The words pre and post are backwards with respect to semantics of English. They only mean where the ++ is in relation Y. Nothing more.
Personally, if I had the choice I would switch the meanings of ++y and y++. This is just an example of a idiom that I had to learn.
If there is a method to this madness I'd like to know in simple terms.
Thanks for reading.
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17"If there is a method to this madness I'd like to know in simple terms." - I think of it as this: PRE increment (y=++x): increment x first THEN assign to y. And for POST increment (y=x++): Assign to y THEN increment x. So think of pre & post as "when does x get incremented" rather than "what version of x does y get". That's my "method to the madness" and it makes perfect sense, IMO ;-)– GrazaApr 23, 2015 at 5:56
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"If there is a method to this madness I'd like to know in simple terms." well, of course there is. preincrement means 'the operator comes pre a.k.a. before the operand, so the increment comes before the operand is returned to the caller, so the value they get includes the increment.' postincrement means 'the operator comes post a.k.a. after the operand, so the increment comes after (a copy of) the operand is returned to the caller, so the value they get does not include the increment.' Sep 4, 2016 at 13:14
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++y
is preincrement because the++
is used as a prefix,y++
is postincrement because++
is used as a postfix (or 'suffix'). Not contrary to the English language at all.– PharapMay 7, 2019 at 16:15 -
"The words pre and post are backwards with respect to semantics of English." I don't agree with that. "Pre" and "post" are modifying "increment", and accurately describe when the increment conceptually occurs. "Pre-increment" conceptually increments before producing a value. "Post-increment" conceptually increments after producing a value. So with pre-increment, you get the incremented value. With post-increment, you get the original value. Feb 8, 2020 at 19:29
It's pretty simple. Both will increment the value of a variable. The following two lines are equal:
x++;
++x;
The difference is if you are using the value of a variable being incremented:
x = y++;
x = ++y;
Here, both lines increment the value of y by one. However, the first one assigns the value of y before the increment to x, and the second one assigns the value of y after the increment to x.
So there's only a difference when the increment is also being used as an expression. The post-increment increments after returning the value. The pre-increment increments before.
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4
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6wilhemtell: Thanks for adding absolutely nothing to the discussion. Good job. Dec 15, 2010 at 0:55
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1@JonathanWood what's the type of
x
? There you have it. The two lines are not equal. Do I add anything to the discussion now? Dec 15, 2010 at 1:22 -
1@JamesMcNellis no, the first two statements have the same effect unless
x
is of a class-type period. Dec 15, 2010 at 1:35 -
4@wilhelmtell: If the overloads are consistent (which they should be), then the effect of the statements
x++;
and++x;
is the same. Yes, you call different functions, but they should do the same thing. That's what I was trying to get at. Dec 15, 2010 at 1:47
int i = 1;
int j = 1;
int k = i++; // post increment
int l = ++j; // pre increment
std::cout << k; // prints 1
std::cout << l; // prints 2
Post increment implies the value i
is incremented after it has been assigned to k
. However, pre increment implies the value j is incremented before it is assigned to l
.
The same applies for decrement.
Post-increment:
int x, y, z;
x = 1;
y = x++; //this means: y is assigned the x value first, then increase the value of x by 1. Thus y is 1;
z = x; //the value of x in this line and the rest is 2 because it was increased by 1 in the above line. Thus z is 2.
Pre-increment:
int x, y, z;
x = 1;
y = ++x; //this means: increase the value of x by 1 first, then assign the value of x to y. The value of x in this line and the rest is 2. Thus y is 2.
z = x; //the value of x in this line is 2 as stated above. Thus z is 2.
Since we now have inline javascript snippets I might as well add an interactive example of pre and pos increment. It's not C++ but the concept stays the same.
let A = 1;
let B = 1;
console.log('A++ === 2', A++ === 2);
console.log('++B === 2', ++B === 2);
From the C99 standard (C++ should be the same, barring strange overloading)
6.5.2.4 Postfix increment and decrement operators
Constraints
1 The operand of the postfix increment or decrement operator shall have qualified or unqualified real or pointer type and shall be a modifiable lvalue.
Semantics
2 The result of the postfix ++ operator is the value of the operand. After the result is obtained, the value of the operand is incremented. (That is, the value 1 of the appropriate type is added to it.) See the discussions of additive operators and compound assignment for information on constraints, types, and conversions and the effects of operations on pointers. The side effect of updating the stored value of the operand shall occur between the previous and the next sequence point.
3 The postfix -- operator is analogous to the postfix ++ operator, except that the value of the operand is decremented (that is, the value 1 of the appropriate type is subtracted from it).
6.5.3.1 Prefix increment and decrement operators
Constraints
1 The operand of the prefix increment or decrement operator shall have qualified or unqualified real or pointer type and shall be a modifiable lvalue.
Semantics
2 The value of the operand of the prefix ++ operator is incremented. The result is the new value of the operand after incrementation. The expression ++E is equivalent to (E+=1). See the discussions of additive operators and compound assignment for information on constraints, types, side effects, and conversions and the effects of operations on pointers.
3 The prefix -- operator is analogous to the prefix ++ operator, except that the value of the operand is decremented.
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11Posting a large block of text from the ISO Standard without any comment or explanation is not really helpful, especially when the text is not entirely self-contained (from this text, what is a sequence point? what is an lvalue? how can this lvalue be qualified or unqualified? where are "the discussions of additive operators and compound assignment"?). Also, assuming that C++ is the same is generally A Bad Idea. There are many small but important differences between the two languages, even in supposedly simple things like operator behavior. Dec 15, 2010 at 1:29
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2I am sorry but posting a part of the standard from a different language isn't particular helpful. Most of the time the increment operators in c++ are used on class types, which makes this more confusing than helpful. Feb 27, 2014 at 8:19
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The OP does not mention c++. I found this answer while studying c. Upvoted (because this is the correct answer for me). Jan 20 at 10:32
Post increment(a++)
If int b = a++,then this means
int b = a;
a = a+1;
Here we add 1 to the value. The value is returned before the increment is made,
For eg a = 1; b = a++;
Then b=1 and a=2
Pre-increment (++a)
If int b = ++a; then this means
a=a+1;
int b=a ;
Pre-increment: This will add 1 to the main value. The value will be returned after the increment is made, For a = 1; b = ++a; Then b=2 and a=2.
Already good answers here, but as usual there seems to be some general lack of clarity in simply remembering which way round these work. I suppose this arises because semantically resolving the nomenclature is not entirely straightforward. For example, you may be aware that "pre-" means "before". But does the pre-increment ++i return the value of i before the increment, or does it increment i before returning a value?
I find it much easier to visually follow the expression through from left to right:
++ i
-------------------------------------------------->
Increment i Then supply the value of i
i ++
-------------------------------------------------->
Supply the value of i Then increment i
Of course, as Alf points out in the accepted answer, this may not reflect when the 'real i' is updated, but it is a convenient way of thinking about what gets supplied to the expression.
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Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.– Community BotDec 13, 2022 at 15:37
#include<stdio.h>
void main(){
char arr[] ="abcd";
char *p=arr,*q=arr;
char k,temp;
temp = *p++; /* here first it assigns value present in address which
is hold by p and then p points to next address.*/
k = ++*q;/*here increments the value present in address which is
hold by q and assigns to k and also stores the incremented value in the same
address location. that why *q will get 'h'.*/
printf("k is %c\n",k); //output: k is h
printf("temp is %c\n",temp);//output: temp is g
printf("*p is %c\n",*p);//output: *p is e
printf("*q is %c",*q);//output: *q is h
}
Post and Pre Increment with Pointers
The pre increment is before increment value ++
e.g.:
(++v) or 1 + v
The post increment is after increment the value ++
e.g.:
(rmv++) or rmv + 1
Program:
int rmv = 10, vivek = 10;
cout << "rmv++ = " << rmv++ << endl; // the value is 10
cout << "++vivek = " << ++vivek; // the value is 11
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first increment the value is pre increment and next step increment the value is post increment Oct 14, 2014 at 10:13
You should also be aware that the behaviour of postincrement/decrement operators is different in C/C++ and Java.
Given
int a=1;
in C/C++ the expression
a++ + a++ + a++
evaluates to 3, while in Java it evaluates to 6. Guess why...
This example is even more confusing:
cout << a++ + a++ + a++ << "<->" << a++ + a++ ;
prints 9<->2 !! This is because the above expression is equivalent to:
operator<<(
operator<<(
operator<<( cout, a++ + a++ ),
"<->"
),
a++ + a++ + a++
)
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1This is due probably to what the C99 standard says: "The side effect of updating the stored value of the operand shall occur between the previous and the next sequence point." May 29, 2013 at 10:13
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I tried this with C and C++ compilers. It also evaluates to 6. With what compiler did you get 3?– Foo BarMar 19, 2016 at 21:51
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5This is undefined behavior when using the pre/post increment operators twice in one expression.– GalikJun 23, 2016 at 7:05
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2The statement "in C/C++ the expression a++ + a++ + a++ evaluates to 3" is simply wrong. As @Galik noted, it results in undefined behavior. Sep 19, 2016 at 15:46