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Trail: Learning the Java Language
Lesson: Language Basics

Arithmetic Operators

The Java programming language supports various arithmetic operators for all floating-point and integer numbers. These operators are + (addition), - (subtraction), * (multiplication), / (division), and % (modulo).

The following table summarizes the binary arithmetic operations in the Java programming language.

Operator Use Description
+ op1 + op2 Adds op1 and op2
- op1 - op2 Subtracts op2 from op1
* op1 * op2 Multiplies op1 by op2
/ op1 / op2 Divides op1 by op2
% op1 % op2 Computes the remainder of dividing op1 by op2

Here's an example program, ArithmeticDemo (in a .java source file), that defines two integers and two double-precision floating-point numbers and uses the five arithmetic operators to perform different arithmetic operations. This program also uses + to concatenate strings. The arithmetic operations are shown in red:

public class ArithmeticDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        //a few numbers
        int i = 37;
        int j = 42;
        double x = 27.475;
        double y = 7.22;
        System.out.println("Variable values...");
        System.out.println("    i = " + i);
        System.out.println("    j = " + j);
        System.out.println("    x = " + x);
        System.out.println("    y = " + y);

        //adding numbers
        System.out.println("Adding...");
        System.out.println("    i + j = " + (i + j));
        System.out.println("    x + y = " + (x + y));

        //subtracting numbers
        System.out.println("Subtracting...");
        System.out.println("    i - j = " + (i - j));
        System.out.println("    x - y = " + (x - y));

        //multiplying numbers
        System.out.println("Multiplying...");
        System.out.println("    i * j = " + (i * j));
        System.out.println("    x * y = " + (x * y));

        //dividing numbers
        System.out.println("Dividing...");
        System.out.println("    i / j = " + (i / j));
        System.out.println("    x / y = " + (x / y));

        //computing the remainder resulting from dividing numbers
        System.out.println("Computing the remainder...");
        System.out.println("    i % j = " + (i % j));
        System.out.println("    x % y = " + (x % y));

        //mixing types
        System.out.println("Mixing types...");
        System.out.println("    j + y = " + (j + y));
        System.out.println("    i * x = " + (i * x));
    }
}
The output from this program is:
Variable values...
    i = 37
    j = 42
    x = 27.475
    y = 7.22
Adding...
    i + j = 79
    x + y = 34.695
Subtracting...
    i - j = -5
    x - y = 20.255
Multiplying...
    i * j = 1554
    x * y = 198.37
Dividing...
    i / j = 0
    x / y = 3.8054
Computing the remainder...
    i % j = 37
    x % y = 5.815
Mixing types...
    j + y = 49.22
    i * x = 1016.58
Note that when an integer and a floating-point number are used as operands to a single arithmetic operation, the result is floating point. The integer is implicitly converted to a floating-point number before the operation takes place. The following table summarizes the data type returned by the arithmetic operators, based on the data type of the operands. The necessary conversions take place before the operation is performed.

Data Type of Result Data Type of Operands
long Neither operand is a float or a double (integer arithmetic); at least one operand is a long.
int Neither operand is a float or a double (integer arithmetic); neither operand is a long.
double At least one operand is a double.
float At least one operand is a float; neither operand is a double.

In addition to the binary forms of + and -, each of these operators has unary versions that perform the following operations:

Operator Use Description
+ +op Promotes op to int if it's a byte, short, or char
- -op Arithmetically negates op

Two shortcut arithmetic operators are ++, which increments its operand by 1, and --, which decrements its operand by 1. Either ++ or -- can appear before (prefix) or after (postfix) its operand. The prefix version, ++op/--op, evaluates to the value of the operand after the increment/decrement operation. The postfix version, op++/op--, evaluates the value of the operand before the increment/decrement operation.

The following program, called SortDemo (in a .java source file) , uses ++ twice and -- once.

public class SortDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        int[] arrayOfInts = { 32, 87, 3, 589, 12, 1076,
                              2000, 8, 622, 127 };

        for (int i = arrayOfInts.length; --i >= 0; ) {
            for (int j = 0; j < i; j++) {
                if (arrayOfInts[j] > arrayOfInts[j+1]) {
                    int temp = arrayOfInts[j];
                    arrayOfInts[j] = arrayOfInts[j+1];
                    arrayOfInts[j+1] = temp;
                 }
             }
         }

         for (int i = 0; i < arrayOfInts.length; i++) {
             System.out.print(arrayOfInts[i] + " ");
         }
         System.out.println();
    }
}
This program puts 10 integer values into an array-a fixed length structure that can hold multiple values of the same type-then sorts them. The line of code in red declares an array referred to by arrayOfInts, creates the array, and puts 10 integer values into it. The program uses arrayOfInts.length to get the number of elements in the array. Individual elements are accessed with this notation: arrayOfInts[index], where index is an integer indicating the position of the element within the array. Note that indices begin at 0.

The output from this program is a list of numbers sorted from lowest to highest:

 
3 8 12 32 87 127 589 622 1076 2000
Let's look at how the SortDemo program uses -- to control the outer of its two nested sorting loops. Here's the statement that controls the outer loop:
for (int i = arrayOfInts.length; --i >= 0; ) {
    ...
}
The for statement is a looping construct, which you'll meet later in this trail. What's important here is the code in red, which continues the for loop as long as the value returned by --i is greater than or equal to 0. Using the prefix version of -- means that the last iteration of this loop occurs when i is equal to 0. If we change the code to use the postfix version of --, the last iteration of this loop occurs when i is equal to -1, which is incorrect for this program because i is used as an array index and -1 is not a valid array index.

The other two loops in the program use the postfix version of ++. In both cases, the version used doesn't really matter, because the value returned by the operator isn't used for anything. When the return value of one of these shortcut operations isn't used for anything, convention prefers the postfix version.

The shortcut increment/decrement operators are summarized in the following table.

Operator Use Description
++ op++ Increments op by 1; evaluates to the value of op before it was incremented
++ ++op Increments op by 1; evaluates to the value of op after it was incremented
-- op-- Decrements op by 1; evaluates to the value of op before it was decremented
-- --op Decrements op by 1; evaluates to the value of op after it was decremented


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