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Operator Overloading (C# vs Java)

Like C++, C# allows you to overload operators for use on your own classes. This makes it possible for a user-defined data type to look as natural and be as logical to use as a fundamental data type. For example, you might create a new data type called ComplexNumber to represent a complex number, and provide methods that perform mathematical operations on such numbers using the standard arithmetic operators, such as using the + operator to add two complex numbers.

To overload an operator, you write a function that has the name operator followed by the symbol for the operator to be overloaded. For instance, this is how you would overload the + operator:

public static ComplexNumber operator+(ComplexNumber a, ComplexNumber b) 

All operator overloads are static methods of the class. Also be aware that if you overload the equality (==) operator, you must overload the inequality operator (!=) as well. The < and > operators, and the <= and >= operators should also be overloaded in pairs.

The full list of operators that can be overloaded is:

  • Unary operators: +, -, !, ~, ++, --, true, false

  • Binary operators: +, -, *, /, %, &, |, ^, <<, >>, ==, !=, >, <, >=, <=

The following code example creates a ComplexNumber class that overloads the + and - operators:

public class ComplexNumber { private int real; private int imaginary; public ComplexNumber() : this(0, 0) // constructor { } public ComplexNumber(int r, int i) // constructor { real = r; imaginary = i; } // Override ToString() to display a complex number in the traditional format:  public override string ToString() { return(System.String.Format("{0} + {1}i", real, imaginary)); } // Overloading '+' operator:  public static ComplexNumber operator+(ComplexNumber a, ComplexNumber b) { return new ComplexNumber(a.real + b.real, a.imaginary + b.imaginary); } // Overloading '-' operator:  public static ComplexNumber operator-(ComplexNumber a, ComplexNumber b) { return new ComplexNumber(a.real - b.real, a.imaginary - b.imaginary); } } 

This class enables you to create and manipulate two complex numbers with code such as this:

class TestComplexNumber { static void Main() { ComplexNumber a = new ComplexNumber(10, 12); ComplexNumber b = new ComplexNumber(8, 9); System.Console.WriteLine("Complex Number a = {0}", a.ToString()); System.Console.WriteLine("Complex Number b = {0}", b.ToString()); ComplexNumber sum = a + b; System.Console.WriteLine("Complex Number sum = {0}", sum.ToString()); ComplexNumber difference = a - b; System.Console.WriteLine("Complex Number difference = {0}", difference.ToString()); } } 

As the program demonstrates, you can now use the plus and minus operators on objects belonging to your ComplexNumber class quite intuitively. Here is the output you would get:

Complex Number a = 10 + 12i

Complex Number b = 8 + 9i

Complex Number sum = 18 + 21i

Complex Number difference = 2 + 3i

Java does not support operator overloading, although internally it overloads the + operator for string concatenation.

See Also

Tasks

Operator Overloading Sample

Concepts

C# Programming Guide

Reference

Overloadable Operators (C# Programming Guide)

Other Resources

The C# Programming Language for Java Developers