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What is the Java ?: operator called and what does it do?

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What is the ?: operator in Java?

The ternary conditional operator ?: allows us to define expressions in Java. It's a condensed form of the if-else statement that also returns a value.

What is ?: In Groovy?

Yes, the "?:" operator will return the value to the left, if it is not null. Else, return the value to the right. "Yes, the "?:" operator will return the value to the left, if it is not null." - That is incorrect.

Why do we use question mark in Java?

In generic code, the question mark (?), called the wildcard, represents an unknown type. The wildcard can be used in a variety of situations: as the type of a parameter, field, or local variable; sometimes as a return type (though it is better programming practice to be more specific).


Yes, it is a shorthand form of

int count;
if (isHere)
    count = getHereCount(index);
else
    count = getAwayCount(index);

It's called the conditional operator. Many people (erroneously) call it the ternary operator, because it's the only ternary (three-argument) operator in Java, C, C++, and probably many other languages. But theoretically there could be another ternary operator, whereas there can only be one conditional operator.

The official name is given in the Java Language Specification:

§15.25 Conditional Operator ? :

The conditional operator ? : uses the boolean value of one expression to decide which of two other expressions should be evaluated.

Note that both branches must lead to methods with return values:

It is a compile-time error for either the second or the third operand expression to be an invocation of a void method.

In fact, by the grammar of expression statements (§14.8), it is not permitted for a conditional expression to appear in any context where an invocation of a void method could appear.

So, if doSomething() and doSomethingElse() are void methods, you cannot compress this:

if (someBool)
    doSomething();
else
    doSomethingElse();

into this:

someBool ? doSomething() : doSomethingElse();

Simple words:

booleanCondition ? executeThisPartIfBooleanConditionIsTrue : executeThisPartIfBooleanConditionIsFalse 

Others have answered this to reasonable extent, but often with the name "ternary operator".

Being the pedant that I am, I'd like to make it clear that the name of the operator is the conditional operator or "conditional operator ?:". It's a ternary operator (in that it has three operands) and it happens to be the only ternary operator in Java at the moment.

However, the spec is pretty clear that its name is the conditional operator or "conditional operator ?:" to be absolutely unambiguous. I think it's clearer to call it by that name, as it indicates the behaviour of the operator to some extent (evaluating a condition) rather than just how many operands it has.


According to the Sun Java Specification, it's called the Conditional Operator. See section 15.25. You're right as to what it does.

The conditional operator ? : uses the boolean value of one expression to decide which of two other expressions should be evaluated.

The conditional operator is syntactically right-associative (it groups right-to-left), so that a?b:c?d:e?f:g means the same as a?b:(c?d:(e?f:g)).

ConditionalExpression:
        ConditionalOrExpression
        ConditionalOrExpression ? Expression : ConditionalExpression

The conditional operator has three operand expressions; ? appears between the first and second expressions, and : appears between the second and third expressions.

The first expression must be of type boolean or Boolean, or a compile-time error occurs.


int count = isHere ? getHereCount(index) : getAwayCount(index);

means :

if (isHere) {
    count = getHereCount(index);
} else {
    count = getAwayCount(index);
}

Not exactly correct, to be precise:

  1. if isHere is true, the result of getHereCount() is returned
  2. otheriwse the result of getAwayCount() is returned

That "returned" is very important. It means the methods must return a value and that value must be assigned somewhere.

Also, it's not exactly syntactically equivalent to the if-else version. For example:

String str1,str2,str3,str4;
boolean check;
//...
return str1 + (check ? str2 : str3) + str4;

If coded with if-else will always result in more bytecode.


condition ? truth : false;

If the condition is true then evaluate the first expression. If the condition is false, evaluate the second expression.

It is called the Conditional Operator and it is a type of Ternary Operation.