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When to use post increment and pre increment in Java [duplicate]

I understand that there are a number of questions on this topic on StackOverflow. But I am still slightly confused and unsure of when to use the operations. I am going through old tests in studying for my exam. One of the methods returns the number of classrooms that are handicapped accessible and are available. I wrote the counter method but am not sure if I am supposed to pre-increment or post increment the counter. I am confused as to how it works with return statement in methods. I still do not get what value the method will return below. The other questions do not show return values in methods and thus I am confused as to practically how it works. Here is the code:

  public int howManyHandi()
{
    int counter= 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < _clsrms.length; i++){
        if (_clsrms[i].handicappedSuitable() && _clsrms[i].isAvailable()){
            ++counter;
        }
    }
    return counter;
}  
like image 321
user1454994 Avatar asked Feb 14 '16 10:02

user1454994


1 Answers

PRE-increment is used when you want to use the incremented value of the variable in that expression., whereas POST-increment uses the original value before incrementing it.

Whenever your code encounters a PRE-increment, it increments the value of that variable in the memory, then load that value and continues reading the expression.

POST-increment does the opposite, it loads that value of that variable in the memory, then increments the value and continues reading the expression.

To make it more clear, consider this

int i = counter++;

is equivalent to

int i = counter;
counter = counter + 1;

WHEREAS

int i = ++counter;

is equivalent to

counter = counter + 1;
int i = counter;

EDIT: My StackOverflow comments arent working, so I'll just edit it here.

What I'm saying it, it only matters when you use that value in an expression.

sum = 0
counter = 0;
sum = (++counter)+(++counter)+(counter++)

evaluates as

sum = 0
counter = 0
//For first ++counter
counter = counter + 1
sum = counter

//For second ++counter
counter = counter + 1
sum = sum + counter

//For first counter++
sum = sum + counter
counter = counter + 1
like image 176
Abhay Shukla Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 22:10

Abhay Shukla