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Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++
What is x = x + 2 ?

Thanks
Khoon.


Nov 15 '05 #1
17 1592
Red Dragon wrote:
Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++
The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
whereas in the latter x is evaluated once. Additionally, the result of
evaluating the former is the same as ++x, not x++.
What is x = x + 2 ?


x += 2.

Robert Gamble

Nov 15 '05 #2
On 11/10/05 16:49, Red Dragon wrote:
Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++
What is x = x + 2 ?


If applicable is: x += 2;
Ciao
Giovanni
--
A computer is like an air conditioner,
it stops working when you open Windows.
Registered Linux user #337974 <http://counter.li.org/>
Nov 15 '05 #3
On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
Red Dragon wrote:
Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++


The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.


actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.
Nov 15 '05 #4
>>> Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++


The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.


actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.


I got it. Thanks for your help.

Regards,
Khoon.
Nov 15 '05 #5
Jordan Abel wrote:
On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
Red Dragon wrote:
Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++


The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.


actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.


As I said, x is *evaluated* twice in the first expression, once in the
second.

Robert Gamble

Nov 15 '05 #6
Robert Gamble wrote:
Jordan Abel wrote:
On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
Red Dragon wrote:
> Can anybody tell me
> if x = x +1 is x++

The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.


actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.


As I said, x is *evaluated* twice in the first expression, once in the
second.

Robert Gamble


*Evaluated * by the compiler? Or machine code? Most compilers I know
generate the same assembly in both cases, even with optimisation turned
off.

Nov 15 '05 #7
sl*******@yahoo.com wrote:
Robert Gamble wrote:
Jordan Abel wrote:
On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
> Red Dragon wrote:
>> Can anybody tell me
>> if x = x +1 is x++
>
> The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
> whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.

actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.
As I said, x is *evaluated* twice in the first expression, once in the
second.

Robert Gamble


*Evaluated * by the compiler? Or machine code?


Evaluated by the abstract machine as per the C Standard.
Most compilers I know generate the same assembly in both cases, even with
optimisation turned off.


An implementation does not have to evaluate part of an expression if
the result of the expression can be deduced without doing so and if the
program cannot tell the difference, irrespective of optimizations. In
other words, x may be evaluated a _maximum_ of 2 times in the first
expression and once in the second. It is therefore obviously possible
that both operations result in x being evaluated the same number of
times, namely one.

Robert Gamble

Nov 15 '05 #8
On 2005-11-11, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
sl*******@yahoo.com wrote:
Robert Gamble wrote:
> Jordan Abel wrote:
> > On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Red Dragon wrote:
> > >> Can anybody tell me
> > >> if x = x +1 is x++
> > >
> > > The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
> > > whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.
> >
> > actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.
>
> As I said, x is *evaluated* twice in the first expression, once in the
> second.
>
> Robert Gamble


*Evaluated * by the compiler? Or machine code?


Evaluated by the abstract machine as per the C Standard.
Most compilers I know generate the same assembly in both cases, even with
optimisation turned off.


An implementation does not have to evaluate part of an expression if
the result of the expression can be deduced without doing so and if the
program cannot tell the difference, irrespective of optimizations. In
other words, x may be evaluated a _maximum_ of 2 times in the first
expression and once in the second. It is therefore obviously possible
that both operations result in x being evaluated the same number of
times, namely one.

Robert Gamble


The compiler can evaluate it as many or as few times as it pleases, as
long as it acts "as if" it only did it as many times as you said. I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.
Nov 15 '05 #9
Jordan Abel wrote:
On 2005-11-11, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
sl*******@yahoo.com wrote:
Robert Gamble wrote:
> Jordan Abel wrote:
> > On 2005-11-10, Robert Gamble <rg*******@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Red Dragon wrote:
> > >> Can anybody tell me
> > >> if x = x +1 is x++
> > >
> > > The effect may be equivalent but in the former x is evaluated twice
> > > whereas in the latter x is evaluated once.
> >
> > actually, no. it's read once and modified once in both cases.
>
> As I said, x is *evaluated* twice in the first expression, once in the
> second.
>
> Robert Gamble

*Evaluated * by the compiler? Or machine code?


Evaluated by the abstract machine as per the C Standard.
Most compilers I know generate the same assembly in both cases, even with
optimisation turned off.


An implementation does not have to evaluate part of an expression if
the result of the expression can be deduced without doing so and if the
program cannot tell the difference, irrespective of optimizations. In
other words, x may be evaluated a _maximum_ of 2 times in the first
expression and once in the second. It is therefore obviously possible
that both operations result in x being evaluated the same number of
times, namely one.

Robert Gamble


The compiler can evaluate it as many or as few times as it pleases, as
long as it acts "as if" it only did it as many times as you said. I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


Well, you are wrong on both counts and it doesn't matter what you
consider evaluate to mean. If you care to actually read what the
Standard has to say you should start by reading the following
paragraphs:

5.1.2.3p3
6.5.2.4p2
6.5.16.2p3

Robert Gamble.

Nov 15 '05 #10
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:
I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


In order to assign the value to a new variable, it has to evaluate the
previous variable first. Computing isn't magic.

--
Mark McIntyre
CLC FAQ <http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/C-faq/top.html>
CLC readme: <http://www.ungerhu.com/jxh/clc.welcome.txt>

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Nov 15 '05 #11
Mark McIntyre <ma**********@spamcop.net> writes:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:
I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


In order to assign the value to a new variable, it has to evaluate the
previous variable first. Computing isn't magic.


Given

x = y;

y is evaluated, but x is not. (Specifically, the previous value of x
is not evaluted.)

--
Keith Thompson (The_Other_Keith) ks***@mib.org <http://www.ghoti.net/~kst>
San Diego Supercomputer Center <*> <http://users.sdsc.edu/~kst>
We must do something. This is something. Therefore, we must do this.
Nov 15 '05 #12
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 19:12:53 GMT, in comp.lang.c , Keith Thompson
<ks***@mib.org> wrote:
Mark McIntyre <ma**********@spamcop.net> writes:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:
I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


In order to assign the value to a new variable, it has to evaluate the
previous variable first. Computing isn't magic.


Given

x = y;

y is evaluated, but x is not. (Specifically, the previous value of x
is not evaluted.)


I agree.
--
Mark McIntyre
CLC FAQ <http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/C-faq/top.html>
CLC readme: <http://www.ungerhu.com/jxh/clc.welcome.txt>

----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----
Nov 15 '05 #13
On 2005-11-11, Mark McIntyre <ma**********@spamcop.net> wrote:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 19:12:53 GMT, in comp.lang.c , Keith Thompson
<ks***@mib.org> wrote:
Mark McIntyre <ma**********@spamcop.net> writes:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:

I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.

In order to assign the value to a new variable, it has to evaluate the
previous variable first. Computing isn't magic.


Given

x = y;

y is evaluated, but x is not. (Specifically, the previous value of x
is not evaluted.)


I agree.


....that's what i said. why's he right and i'm not?
Nov 15 '05 #14
# >>Given
# >>
# >> x = y;
# >>
# >>y is evaluated, but x is not. (Specifically, the previous value of x
# >>is not evaluted.)
# >
# > I agree.
#
# ...that's what i said. why's he right and i'm not?

The lvalue x and rvalue y are evaluated.

For example if an lvalue is a[i++], i will be incremented. Evaluation of
an lvalue does not include loading whatever is at the address into a
register or whatever.
--
SM Ryan http://www.rawbw.com/~wyrmwif/
God's a skeeball fanatic.
Nov 15 '05 #15
Keith Thompson <ks***@mib.org> writes:
Mark McIntyre <ma**********@spamcop.net> writes:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:
I take
"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


In order to assign the value to a new variable, it has to evaluate the
previous variable first. Computing isn't magic.


Given

x = y;

y is evaluated, but x is not. (Specifically, the previous value of x
is not evaluted.)


In the technical language of the Standard, I think it's more
accurate to say that both x and y are evaluated, but only the
evaluation of y results in a conversion of the lvalue to the
value stored (which results in a read access of y's object).

(In case someone wants a reference - try 6.3.2.1 p1,p2.)
Nov 15 '05 #16
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 23:08:02 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 07:34:46 +0000 (UTC), in comp.lang.c , Jordan Abel
<jm****@purdue.edu> wrote:

>I take
>"evaluate" to mean "get the value of", and assigning to a variable does
>not "evaluate" it, it "assigns" it.


...that's what i said. why's he right and i'm not?


Because it wasn't how what you wrote, read.

Your words, quoted above, implied to me that assigning variable X to
variable Y didn't evaluate X, it only assigned it. I believe we can
agree that this is wrong.
--
Mark McIntyre
CLC FAQ <http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/C-faq/top.html>
CLC readme: <http://www.ungerhu.com/jxh/clc.welcome.txt>

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Nov 15 '05 #17
Red Dragon wrote:
Can anybody tell me
if x = x +1 is x++
What is x = x + 2 ?


x++; x++;
Question: If the king sits on gold, who sits on silver???

Answer: The Lone Ranger
Nov 15 '05 #18

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