Ternary Operator
The ternary operator in C provides a concise way to write simple conditional expressions. Its syntax is condition ? expr1 : expr2, where condition is evaluated first. If the condition is true (nonzero), the entire expression evaluates to expr1; if the condition is false (zero), it evaluates to expr2. This operator is especially useful for assigning a value to a variable based on a condition, allowing you to write more compact code than with a full if-else statement.
ternary_syntax.c
123456// Syntax of the ternary operator in C // This example does not include a main function. int result; result = (condition) ? value1 : value2;
The ternary operator's syntax, condition ? expr1 : expr2, allows you to perform simple assignments based on a condition in a single statement.
max_of_two.c
12345678910111213#include <stdio.h> int main() { int a = 7; int b = 12; int max; max = (a > b) ? a : b; printf("The larger number is: %d\n", max); return 0; }
This is particularly useful when you want to choose between two values quickly, without the need for multiple lines of code or a full if-else block.
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Ternary Operator
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The ternary operator in C provides a concise way to write simple conditional expressions. Its syntax is condition ? expr1 : expr2, where condition is evaluated first. If the condition is true (nonzero), the entire expression evaluates to expr1; if the condition is false (zero), it evaluates to expr2. This operator is especially useful for assigning a value to a variable based on a condition, allowing you to write more compact code than with a full if-else statement.
ternary_syntax.c
123456// Syntax of the ternary operator in C // This example does not include a main function. int result; result = (condition) ? value1 : value2;
The ternary operator's syntax, condition ? expr1 : expr2, allows you to perform simple assignments based on a condition in a single statement.
max_of_two.c
12345678910111213#include <stdio.h> int main() { int a = 7; int b = 12; int max; max = (a > b) ? a : b; printf("The larger number is: %d\n", max); return 0; }
This is particularly useful when you want to choose between two values quickly, without the need for multiple lines of code or a full if-else block.
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