An expression is a special kind of statement that evaluates to a value. Every expression is composed of −
Operands − Represents the data
Operator − Defines how the operands will be processed to produce a value.
Consider the following expression – "2 + 3". In this expression, 2 and 3 are operands and the symbol "+" (plus) is the operator.
In this chapter, we will discuss the operators that are available in Dart.
The following table shows the arithmetic operators supported by Dart.
Sr.No | Operators & Meaning |
---|---|
1 | +
Add |
2 | −
Subtract |
3 | -expr
Unary minus, also known as negation (reverse the sign of the expression) |
4 | *
Multiply |
5 | /
Divide |
6 | ~/
Divide, returning an integer result |
7 | %
Get the remainder of an integer division (modulo) |
8 | ++
Increment |
9 | --
Decrement |
Relational Operators tests or defines the kind of relationship between two entities. Relational operators return a Boolean value i.e. true/ false.
Assume the value of A is 10 and B is 20.
Operator | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
> | Greater than | (A > B) is False |
< | Lesser than | (A < B) is True |
>= | Greater than or equal to | (A >= B) is False |
<= | Lesser than or equal to | (A <= B) is True |
== | Equality | (A==B) is False |
!= | Not equal | (A!=B) is True |
These operators are handy for checking types at runtime.
Operator | Meaning |
---|---|
is | True if the object has the specified type |
is! | False if the object has the specified type |
The following table lists the bitwise operators available in Dart and their role −
Operator | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Bitwise AND | a & b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of both operands are ones. |
Bitwise OR | a | b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of either or both operands are ones. |
Bitwise XOR | a ^ b | Returns a one in each bit position for which the corresponding bits of either but not both operands are ones. |
Bitwise NOT | ~ a | Inverts the bits of its operand. |
Left shift | a ≪ b | Shifts a in binary representation b (< 32) bits to the left, shifting in zeroes from the right. |
Signpropagating right shift | a ≫ b | Shifts a in binary representation b (< 32) bits to the right, discarding bits shifted off. |
The following table lists the assignment operators available in Dart.
Sr.No | Operator & Description |
---|---|
1 | =(Simple Assignment )
Assigns values from the right side operand to the left side operand Ex:C = A + B will assign the value of A + B into C |
2 | ??=
Assign the value only if the variable is null |
3 | +=(Add and Assignment)
It adds the right operand to the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Ex: C += A is equivalent to C = C + A |
4 | ─=(Subtract and Assignment)
It subtracts the right operand from the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Ex: C -= A is equivalent to C = C – A |
5 | *=(Multiply and Assignment)
It multiplies the right operand with the left operand and assigns the result to the left operand. Ex: C *= A is equivalent to C = C * A |
6 | /=(Divide and Assignment)
It divides the left operand with the right operand and assigns the result to the left operand. |
Note − Same logic applies to Bitwise operators, so they will become ≪=, ≫=, ≫=, ≫=, |= and ^=.
Logical operators are used to combine two or more conditions. Logical operators return a Boolean value. Assume the value of variable A is 10 and B is 20.
Operator | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
&& | And − The operator returns true only if all the expressions specified return true |
(A > 10 && B > 10) is False. |
|| | OR − The operator returns true if at least one of the expressions specified return true |
(A > 10 || B > 10) is True. |
! | NOT − The operator returns the inverse of the expression’s result. For E.g.: !(7>5) returns false |
!(A > 10) is True. |
Dart has two operators that let you evaluate expressions that might otherwise require ifelse statements −
If condition is true, then the expression evaluates expr1 (and returns its value); otherwise, it evaluates and returns the value of expr2.
If expr1 is non-null, returns its value; otherwise, evaluates and returns the value of expr2
The following example shows how you can use conditional expression in Dart −
void main() { var a = 10; var res = a > 12 ? "value greater than 10":"value lesser than or equal to 10"; print(res); }
It will produce the following output −
value lesser than or equal to 10
Let’s take another example −
void main() { var a = null; var b = 12; var res = a ?? b; print(res); }
It will produce the following output −
12