In Java, the multiplication operator is represented by the asterisk, "*". This was not invented by Java; most programming languages, as well as programs such as Excel, use the same symbol.
* symbol
There is no sizeOf() operator in Java.
Java does not support opperator overloading, so the answer to your question is: none.
arithmatic operator +,-,*,/,% assigment oprator == logical operator &,|,^,&&,,! bitwise opertor &,|,^ left shift << right shift >> left shift zero fill << assignment operator +=,-=,*=,/=
The symbol of java used as a hot cup because At the time of taking morning TEA JAMES GOSLIN got a project which name was green project so thats why he uses the symbol of HOT CUP for JAVA.
== == === === === === === === Some Body told me that operator overloading is not there because it violates the transparency of java.since there is no hiding of information in java it does support op overloading === === === === === === Pranab Kumar Rana Software Engineer..... === === === ===
In Java, the multiplication operator is represented by the asterisk, "*". This was not invented by Java; most programming languages, as well as programs such as Excel, use the same symbol.
Java does not support object overriding. It does support operator overloading by means of the "+" symbol which is used for both numeric addition as well as string concatenation.
An operator is a symbol that does something in Java. for ex: "+" is an arithmetic operator that adds two numbers. ">" is a logical operator that checks if one number is greater than the other. There are many different types of operators in Java like Arithmetic, Logical, Relational and Assignment operators
There is no sizeOf() operator in Java.
Java does not have the sizeOf() operator or any operator that gives an equivalent result.
Java does not support opperator overloading, so the answer to your question is: none.
arithmatic operator +,-,*,/,% assigment oprator == logical operator &,|,^,&&,,! bitwise opertor &,|,^ left shift << right shift >> left shift zero fill << assignment operator +=,-=,*=,/=
Java, like many other programming languages, uses the asterisk for the multiplication operator. Therefore, two numbers a and b are multiplied, and their product assigned to a variable r, with this construct: r = a * b;
Java does not support user defined operator overloading.The operator '+' is overloaded in Java and can be used for adding both numbers and Strings.
That refers to any symbol used to indicate some calculation. Here are some examples:+, -, *, / (for addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) ++, -- (to add or subtract one) (or), && (and)
"==" in java is the binary operator which compares two values and gives a boolean result While "=" in java is a assignment operator which assigns a value to a variable.
conditional operator , size of operator , membership operator and scope resulation operator can not be overload in c++