I'm confused about direct assignment and ternary conditional operators precedence:
#include<stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
int j, k;
j = k = 0;
(1 ? j : k) = 1; // first
printf("%d %d\n", j, k);
j = k = 0;
1 ? j : k = 1; // second
printf("%d %d\n", j, k);
return 0;
}
I would expect the output to be:
1 0
1 0
But it happens to be:
1 0
0 0
Plus I get this warning:
main.cpp:20: warning: statement has no effect
which is about the line I commented as second.
Since the direct assignment operator has less precedence than the ternary conditional operator, I was expecting lines commented as first and second to be equivalent. But alas it is not the case.
I tried this with g++ --version (Ubuntu 4.4.3-4ubuntu5) 4.4.3
The operator precedence in the C/C++ language in not defined by a table or numbers, but by a grammar. Here is the grammar for conditional operator from C++0x draft chapter 5.16 Conditional operator [expr.cond]:
conditional-expression: logical-or-expression logical-or-expression ? expression : assignment-expression
The precedence table like this one is therefore correct when you use assignment on the left side of the doublecolon, but not when used on the right side. What is the reason for this asymmetry I have no idea. It may be a historical reason: in C the conditional result was not lvalue, therefore assigning something to it had no sense, and allowing assignment to be accepted without parentheses might seem smart at that time.