Skip to main content

C++ Operator Overloading

C++ Operator Overloading

Operator overloading is a type of polymorphism in which a single operator is overloaded to give user defined meaning to it. Operator overloading provides a flexibility option for creating new definitions of C++ operators. There are some C++ operators which we can’t overload.
The lists of such operators are:
  • Class member access operator (. (dot), .* (dot-asterisk))
  • Scope resolution operator (::)
  • Conditional Operator (?:)
  • Size Operator (sizeof)
These are the lists of few excluded operators and are very few when compared to large sets of operators which can be used for the concept of operator overloading. Overloaded operator is used to perform operation on user-defined data type. Let us take an example of the addition operator (+) operator has been overloaded to perform addition on various variable types, like for integer, floating point, String (concatenation) etc.
syntex:
return type className :: operator op (arg_list)
{
//Function body;
}
Here, return type is the type of value returned by the specified operation and op is the operator being overloaded.

Here is a program for Operator Overloading

Example:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

class MinusOverload {
private:
int a;
int b;

public:
void Distance()
{
a
= 0;
b
= 0;
}

MinusOverload(int f, int i)
{
int c;
a
= f;
b
= i;
c
= a - b;
cout
<< "\nC:" << c;
}

void display()
{
cout
<< "A: " << a << " B:" << b << endl;
}

MinusOverload operator-()
{
a
= -a;
b
= -b;
return MinusOverload(a, b);
}
};

int main()
{
MinusOverload M1(6, 8), M2(-3, -4);
-M1;
M1
.display();
-M2;
M2
.display();
return 0;
}

Comments

For Programs Click Here

Popular posts from this blog

Syllabus

Syllabus  C Programming Tutorials C Tutorial C Introduction History of C Programming Language C Installation C Program Structure C Input and Output (I/O) C Format Specifiers Declaration & Assignments C Tokens C Identifiers C Keywords C Constants C Operators C Data Types C Variables C Preprocessors C Type Casting C Custom Header File Flow Control C Decision Making C if Statements C if-else Statements C Nested if-else Statements C else-if Statements C goto Statement C switch Statements C Loops C while loops C do while loops C for loops Functions C Functions C Function Arguments C Library Functions C Variable Scope Arrays & Strings C Arrays C Strings Pointers C Pointers C Dynamic Memory Allocation Structure & Union C Structures C Unions File I/O C File Handling C fopen C fclose C getc C putc C getw C putw C fprintf C fscanf C fgets C fputs C feof                                     ...

Syllabus

Python Tutorials Python Tutorial Python Overview Python Installation Basics of Python Programming Python Operators Python Keywords Python Numbers Python Strings Python Data Types Python Variables Python Lists Python Tuples Python Date and Time Python Decision Making Python Loops Python File Handling Python Dictionaries Python Functions Python Modules Python Exceptions Handling Python Object Oriented Inheritance in Python Python Regular Expressions Python Networking Programming Python Multithreaded Programming Python CGI Programming Python Database Connection Python Metaprogramming Python Data Processing And Encoding Python GUI Programming

Java Method Overriding

Java Method Overriding Declaring a method in the subclass which already exists there in the parent class is known as method overriding. When a class is inheriting a method from a superclass of its own, then there is an option of overriding the method provided it is not declared as final. The advantage of using overriding is the ability to classify a behavior that’s specific to the child class and the child class can implement a parent class method based on its necessity. There are certain rules that a programmer should follow in order to implement overriding. These are: In Java, a method can only be written in the child class and not in same class. Argument list should be exactly the same as that of the overridden method of that class. Instance methods can also be overridden if they are inherited by the child class. A constructor cannot be overridden. Final – declared methods cannot be overridden. Any method that is static cannot be used to override. The return type must have to be the...