It somehow tells the compiler that the function will accept an unknown number of parameters.
calloc operator,malloc operator
addition operator subtraction operator product
I'm not sure what you mean, but the c assignment operator is the equal sign, =
Most likely the function call (yes, it is an operator in C), but of course it is up to you.
In C we use & operator while giving address of some variable to some pointer variable. & operator is also used in scanf().
+ += - -= * *= / /= % %= = == != <= >= & && | ^ ~ << <<= >> >>= , [] () are the basic operator in TURBO C
conditional operator , size of operator , membership operator and scope resulation operator can not be overload in c++
:: operator can not be used in C.
There is no memory management operator in C++ -- it is an unmanaged language. You use the C++ new operator to allocate memory, and use the C++ delete operator to release previously allocated memory.
No. Operator and/or function overloading is only a C++ thing.
Conditional Operator- Its the only ternary operator in c/c++.- Its syntax is-(condition)?statement1:statement2;-Shruti Jain
C does not support operator overloading. If you mean C++ operator overloading, it depends on exactly what you wanted to do. If you wanted to '+' to strings, then you could write: string operator+(string a, string b) { // do something }
In C, the sizeof operator can be considered a dummy operator because it does not perform any operations on the data but simply returns the size in bytes of a variable or a data type.
The this operator is not a c operator. It is a c++ keyword. It is equivalent to an r-value pointer to the current instance of an object. It is useful when resolving between object members and method parameters.
+ is an example, one of many, of a binary operator in C or C++ a = b + c; // for usage example
There is no "power" operator in C or C++. You need to the use the math library function pow().
C and C operation