How does C++ handle &&? (Short-circuit evaluation) [duplicate]

筅森魡賤 提交于 2019-11-26 00:24:10

问题


When encountering a (bool1 && bool2), does c++ ever attempts to check bool2 if bool1 was found false or does it ignore it the way PHP does?

Sorry if it is too basic of a question, but I really could not find a mentioning of that neither in Schildt nor on the Internet.


回答1:


Yes, the && operator in C++ uses short-circuit evaluation so that if bool1 evaluates to false it doesn't bother evaluating bool2.

"Short-circuit evaluation" is the fancy term that you want to Google and look for in indexes.




回答2:


C++ does use short-circuit logic, so if bool1 is false, it won't need to check bool2.

This is useful if bool2 is actually a function that returns bool, or to use a pointer:

if ( pointer && pointer->someMethod() )

without short-circuit logic, it would crash on dereferencing a NULL pointer, but with short-circuit logic, it works fine.




回答3:


That is correct (short-cicuit behavior). But beware: short-circuiting stops if the operator invoked is not the built-in operator, but a user-defined operator&& (same with operator||).

Reference in this SO




回答4:


The && operator short circuits in C++ - if bool1 was false in your example, bool2 wouldn't be checked/executed.




回答5:


This is called short-circuit evaluation (Wikipedia)

The && operator is a short circuit operator in C++ and it will not evaluate bool2 if bool1 is false.




回答6:


Short-circuit evaluation denotes the semantics of some Boolean operators in some programming languages in which the second argument is only executed or evaluated if the first argument does not suffice to determine the value of the expression: for instance, when the first argument of the AND function evaluates to false, the overall value must be false; and when the first argument of the OR function evaluates to true, the overall value must be true.

In C++, both && and || operators use short-circuit evaluation.




回答7:


What you're referring to is short circuit evaluation. I thought that it may be compiler specific, however that article I linked to shows it as language specific, and C++ does adhere. If it is indeed compiler specific, I can't imagine a compiler that wouldn't follow it. The day to day compiler I use at the moment, VS 2008, does. Basically it will follow the operator precedence, and as soon as the condition result is guaranteed,



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5211961/how-does-c-handle-short-circuit-evaluation

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