Difference between revisions of "Operators"

From Kolmafia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>StDoodle
m
imported>StDoodle
m
Line 51: Line 51:
  
 
==Boolean Operators==
 
==Boolean Operators==
 
 
 
{{
 
{{
 
eztable|
 
eztable|
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>==</nowiki> |equal to}}}}
+
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>&&</nowiki> |and}}}}
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>!=</nowiki> |not equal to}}}}
+
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>||</nowiki> |or}}}}
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki><</nowiki> |less than}}}}
+
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>!</nowiki> |not}}}}
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>></nowiki> |greater than}}}}
 
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki><=</nowiki> |less than or equal to}}}}
 
{{eztr|{{eztd| <nowiki>>=</nowiki> |greater than or equal to}}}}
 
 
}}
 
}}
 +
Note that the above operators only work with boolean values & datatypes. To make use of them with other datatypes, you will either need to first perform a [[Datatype Conversions|Datatype Conversion]], or you will need to nest your operations such that a boolean value is used with the boolean operators.
  
We also need to understand Basic Boolean operators. These only work with boolean:
 
 
  <table width=95%  cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0> 
 
    <tr>
 
      <td><center><b>Boolean operators</b></center></td>
 
      <table width=100%  cellspacing=0 cellpadding=1>
 
        <tr>
 
          <td><center><b> Operator </b></center></td>
 
          <td><center><b> Operation </b></center></td>
 
        </tr>
 
        <tr>
 
          <td><center> && </center></td>
 
          <td><center> and </center></td>
 
        </tr>
 
        <tr>
 
          <td><center> || </center></td>
 
          <td><center> or </center></td>
 
        </tr>
 
        <tr>
 
          <td><center> ! </center></td>
 
          <td><center> not </center></td>
 
        </tr>
 
      </table>
 
    </tr>
 
  </table>
 
  
 
{{
 
{{

Revision as of 17:47, 13 March 2010

Mathematical Operators

The following operators are used in KoLmafia:

+ Addition
- Subtraction
* Multiplication
/ Division
 % Modulo

Relational Operators

To follow these examples, a basic understanding of the concepts found on Control Structures would be helpful.

In order to create more complex if statements, we need to understand the basic relational operators:

== equal to
 != not equal to
< less than
> greater than
<= less than or equal to
>= greater than or equal to

Note that you cannot mix datatypes within a comparison or KoLmafia will abort wil an error, with the exception of mixing types int and float, where KoLmafia will do a transparent type conversion behind-the-scenes. If you need to compare different datatypes, use one or more of the Datatype Conversion functions.


if ( true == true )
{
   print( "This line DOES get printed." );
}
if ( true == false )
{
   print( "This line does NOT get printed." );
}
if ( 1 == 1.0 )
{
   print( "This line DOES get printed." );
}
if ( 1 == 2 )
{
   print( "This line does NOT get printed." );
}



Boolean Operators

&& and
|| or
 ! not

Note that the above operators only work with boolean values & datatypes. To make use of them with other datatypes, you will either need to first perform a Datatype Conversion, or you will need to nest your operations such that a boolean value is used with the boolean operators.


if ( true && true )
{
   print( "This line DOES get printed (both possibilities proved true)." );
}
if ( true && false )
{
   print( "This line does NOT get printed (only one possibility proved true)." );
}
if ( true || false )
{
   print( "This line DOES get printed (since at least one of the possibilities proved true)." );
}
if ( ! false )
{
   print( "This line DOES get printed (since the not operator converted false to true)." );
}


We also need to understand operator precedence. Statements inside a () pair are always evaluated first, then from left to right.

 if(true || false && true)
   {
   print("This line gets printed");
   //true or false is true
   //true(from true or false) and true equals true
   }
 if(true && (false && true))
   {
   print("this line never gets printed");
   //false && true is inside () so it's first and evaluates to false
   //true && false(from true && false) is false
   }
 if(true && !(false && true))
   {
   print("This line gets printed");
   //false && true is inside () so it's first and evaluates to false
   //the ! operator converts the false (from (true && false)) to true
   //true && true(from !(true && false)) is true
   }


Using else we can have a code block which executes when the if statement evaluates to true, and another code block which executes when the if statement evaluates to false.

   if(false)
     {
     print("this line never gets printed");
     }
     else
     {
     print("this line gets printed"); 
     } 



We also need to understand nesting if statements.

 if(true)
   {
   if(true)
     {
     print("this line gets printed");
     }
     else
     {
     print("this line never gets printed"); 
     }    
   print("this line gets printed also");
   }
 if(false)
   {
   if(true)
     {
     print("this line never gets printed");
     //though inside an if(true) statement, 
     //the outer if(false) stops the code from ever getting here.
     }
     else
     {
     print("this line never gets printed"); 
     }
   print("this line never gets printed");
   }



Now you only need to put it all together as needed for your situation.