So, I'm looking into writing a slightly more complex operation with logic operators in an if-else statement. I know I can do parentheses, and I know it's the better way of doing this, but I've gotten curious and so I'm going to ask. If I were to do something like this:
if (firstRun == true || selectedCategory != undefined && selectedState != undefined) {
//Do something
} else {
//Do something else
}
How will that be operated without the use of parentheses? I know there is an order of operations for logic operators, similar to PEMDAS, right? I'm curious if it'll be ran something like this:
firstRun == true || (selectedCategory != undefined && selectedState != undefined)
or maybe if the 'OR' operator takes precedence instead and it ends up going like:
(firstRun == true || selectedCategory != undefined) && selectedState != undefined
The full list would be nice, if you can find it somewhere, of the order of operations for this. Thanks!
When two operators share a single operand, the operator having the highest precedence goes first. For example, x + y * z is treated as x + (y * z), whereas x * y + z is treated as (x * y) + z because * operator has highest precedence in comparison of + operator.
The precedence of Division and Multiplication arithmetic operators is the same.
My rule of thumb, which covers basically 99% of all use cases for conditional statements, is:
()
. or [...]
!
< , >= , === , !=, ...
&&
||
MDN gives you the exhaustive breakdown: JavaScript Operator Precedence
So for your example:
(firstRun == true || selectedCategory != undefined && selectedState != undefined)
equals
(firstRun == true) || ((selectedCategory != undefined) && (selectedState != undefined))
For anything more complex than the above mentioned cases, I would look into refactoring the code for readability's sake anyway!
There is a pretty good rule of thumb to this. Think of these operators as of mathematical ones:
AND is multiplication (eg. 0 * 1 = 0 => FALSE)OR is adding (eg. 0 + 1 = 1 => TRUE)When you remember this, all you have to know is that multiplication always comes before addition.
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