Operator Precedence
When multiple operators are used in a single expression, we need to know the precedence of these operators to figure out the sequence of operation that will take place.
Precedence defines the order of execution, i.e., which operator gets the higher priority.
Example 1: Operator Precedence in R
> 2 + 6 * 5
[1] 32
Here, the *
operator gets higher priority than +
and hence 2 + 6 * 5
is interpreted as 2 + (6 * 5)
. This order can be changed with the use of parentheses ().
> (2 + 6) * 5
[1] 40
Operator Associativity
It is possible to have multiple operators of same precedence in an expression. In such case the order of execution is determined through associativity.
The associativity of operators is given in the table above.
We can see that most of them have left to right associativity.
Example 2: Operator Associativity in R
> 3 / 4 / 5
[1] 0.15
In the above example, 3 / 4 / 5
is evaluated as (3 / 4) / 5
due to left to right associativity of the /
operator. However, this order too can be changed using parentheses ().
> 3 / (4 / 5)
[1] 3.75
Precedence and Associativity of different operators in R from highest to lowest
Operator | Description | Associativity |
---|---|---|
^ | Exponent | Right to Left |
-x, +x | Unary minus, Unary plus | Left to Right |
%% | Modulus | Left to Right |
*, / | Multiplication, Division | Left to Right |
+, - | Addition, Subtraction | Left to Right |
<, >, <=, >=, ==, != | Comparisions | Left to Right |
! | Logical NOT | Left to Right |
&, && | Logical AND | Left to Right |
|, || | Logical OR | Left to Right |
->, ->> | Rightward assignment | Left to Right |
<-, <<- | Leftward assignment | Right to Left |
= | Leftward assignment | Right to Left |