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Re: Operator precedence [message #185064 is a reply to message #185063] Tue, 25 February 2014 18:55 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
Thomas 'PointedEars'  is currently offline  Thomas 'PointedEars'
Messages: 701
Registered: October 2010
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Senior Member
Christoph Michael Becker wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
>> Christoph Michael Becker wrote:
>>> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
>>>> Christoph Michael Becker wrote:
>>>> > Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
>>>> >> Ben Bacarisse wrote:
>>>> >>> not in any normal sense of the word.
>>>> >> Please define what you consider to be an operator in a “normal sense
>>>> >> of the word”.
>>>> > It might be defined as an operator that can be used in arbitrary
>>>> > expressions.
>>>> A speculation, one that is almost self-evidently false. Just consider
>>>> the operators (including, but not just in, programming languages) that
>>>> require their operands to be of a certain type.
>>>
>>> I have to admit that this "definition" was far to inaccurate. However,
>>> regarding the syntax alone it has some appeal.
>>
>> This “definition” is simply nonsense. An operator is not only an
>> operator when it “can be used in arbitrary expressions”. In mathematics,
>> from which is the definition that fits best here, an operator is a
>> mapping from elements of one or more sets to elements of another or to
>> the same set.
>
> That sounds "very similar" to the definition of a function. ;)

Yes, this is not a coincidence.

>>>> However, in ECMAScript:
>>>>
>>>> | >>> var x = 42, 23;
>>>
>>> This use of the comma is not part of ECMAScript's "Expression", but
>>> rather of "VariableDeclarationList".
>>
>> Please stop telling me things I know:
>
> I have posted a message to Usenet. If you already knew these details,
> fine. However, other readers might not.

I had already conceded that I was wrong, and explained why. You have been
preaching to the choir.

> Furthermore I was trying to stress my (resp. Ben's) point, that a comma
> is not always an operator, even if a language defines a comma operator.

No disagreement there. However, strange as it may seem, without proof to
the contrary “,” *is* an operator in PHP. That it is one is not negated by
its being of limited use (which contradicts the manual; we may assume that
it was intended to work like in C/C++/ECMAScript, but was never implemented
this way; a documentation bug should be filed).


PointedEars
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