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JavaScript Operators

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Example #

Assign values to variables and add them together:

var x = 5; // assign the value 5 to x var y = 2; // assign the value 2 to y var z = x + y; // assign the value 7 to z (5 + 2)

The assignment operator (=) assigns a value to a variable.

Assignment #

var x = 10;

The addition operator (+) adds numbers:

Adding #

var x = 5; var y = 2; var z = x + y;

The multiplication operator (*) multiplies numbers.

Multiplying #

var x = 5; var y = 2; var z = x * y;

JavaScript Arithmetic Operators #

Arithmetic operators are used to perform arithmetic on numbers:

Operator Description
+ Addition
Subtraction
* Multiplication
** Exponentiation (ES2016)
/ Division
% Modulus (Division Remainder)
++ Increment
Decrement

Arithmetic operators are fully described in the JS Arithmetic chapter.


JavaScript Assignment Operators #

Assignment operators assign values to JavaScript variables.

Operator Example Same As
= x = y x = y
+= x += y x = x + y
-= x -= y x = x – y
*= x *= y x = x * y
/= x /= y x = x / y
%= x %= y x = x % y
**= x **= y x = x ** y

The addition assignment operator (+=) adds a value to a variable.

Assignment #

var x = 10; x += 5;

Assignment operators are fully described in the JS Assignment chapter.


JavaScript String Operators #

The + operator can also be used to add (concatenate) strings.

Example #

var txt1 = "John"; var txt2 = "Doe"; var txt3 = txt1 + " " + txt2;

The result of txt3 will be:

John Doe

The += assignment operator can also be used to add (concatenate) strings:

Example #

var txt1 = "What a very "; txt1 += "nice day";

The result of txt1 will be:

What a very nice day

When used on strings, the + operator is called the concatenation operator.


Adding Strings and Numbers #

Adding two numbers, will return the sum, but adding a number and a string will return a string:

Example #

var x = 5 + 5; var y = "5" + 5; var z = "Hello" + 5;

The result of x, y, and z will be:

10 55 Hello5

If you add a number and a string, the result will be a string!


JavaScript Comparison Operators #

Operator Description
== equal to
=== equal value and equal type
!= not equal
!== not equal value or not equal type
> greater than
< less than
>= greater than or equal to
<= less than or equal to
? ternary operator

Comparison operators are fully described in the JS Comparisons chapter.


JavaScript Logical Operators #

Operator Description
&& logical and
|| logical or
! logical not

Logical operators are fully described in the JS Comparisons chapter.


JavaScript Type Operators #

Operator Description
typeof Returns the type of a variable
instanceof Returns true if an object is an instance of an object type

Type operators are fully described in the JS Type Conversion chapter.


JavaScript Bitwise Operators #

Bit operators work on 32 bits numbers.

Any numeric operand in the operation is converted into a 32 bit number. The result is converted back to a JavaScript number.

Operator Description Example Same as Result Decimal
& AND 5 & 1 0101 & 0001 0001  1
| OR 5 | 1 0101 | 0001 0101  5
~ NOT ~ 5  ~0101 1010  10
^ XOR 5 ^ 1 0101 ^ 0001 0100  4
<< Zero fill left shift 5 << 1 0101 << 1 1010  10
>> Signed right shift 5 >> 1 0101 >> 1 0010   2
>>> Zero fill right shift 5 >>> 1 0101 >>> 1 0010   2

The examples above uses 4 bits unsigned examples. But JavaScript uses 32-bit signed numbers.
Because of this, in JavaScript, ~ 5 will not return 10. It will return -6.
~00000000000000000000000000000101 will return 11111111111111111111111111111010

Bitwise operators are fully described in the JS Bitwise chapter.

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