C alternative tokens

C standard library header providing a set of alternative spellings of common operators From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

C alternative tokens refer to a set of alternative spellings of common operators in the C programming language. They are implemented as a group of macro constants in the C standard library in the iso646.h header. The tokens were created by Bjarne Stroustrup for the pre-standard C++ language[1] and were added to the C standard in a 1995 amendment to the C90 standard via library to avoid the breakage of existing code.

The alternative tokens allow programmers to use C language bitwise and logical operators which could otherwise be hard to type on some international and non-QWERTY keyboards. The name of the header file they are implemented in refers to the ISO/IEC 646 standard, a 7-bit character set with a number of regional variations, some of which have accented characters in place of the punctuation marks used by C operators.

The macros

The iso646.h header defines the following 11 macros as stated below:[2]

More information Macro, Defined as ...
Macro Defined as
and&&
and_eq&=
bitand&
bitor|
compl~
not!
not_eq!=
or||
or_eq|=
xor^
xor_eq^=
Close

C++

The above-mentioned identifiers are operator keywords in the ISO C++ programming language and do not require the inclusion of a header file.[3] For consistency, the C++98 standard provided both <iso646.h> and a corresponding <ciso646>. However they both had no effect, being empty.[4][5] Some compilers, such as Microsoft Visual C++ have, at least in the past, required the header to be included in order to use these identifiers unless a compiler flag is set.[6][7] The header <ciso646> was deprecated in C++17, and removed in C++20,[8] while <iso646.h> was retained for compatibility with C.[9]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.