Operator Precedence

Description

When several operations occur in an expression, each part is evaluated and resolved in a predetermined order. That order is known as operator precedence. Parentheses can be used to override the order of precedence and force some parts of an expression to be evaluated before others. Operations within parentheses are always performed before those outside. Within parentheses, however, normal operator precedence is maintained.

When expressions contain operators from more than one category, arithmetic operators are evaluated first, comparison operators are evaluated next, and logical operators are evaluated last. Comparison operators all have equal precedence; that is, they are evaluated in the left to right order in which they appear. Arithmetic and logical operators are evaluated in the following order of precedence:

Arithmetic

Comparison

Logical


Exponentiation (^)

Equality (=)

Not

Negation (-)

Inequality (<>)

And

Multiplication and division (*, /)

Less than (<)

Or

Integer division (\)

Greater than (>)

Xor

Modulo arithmetic (Mod)

Less than or Equal to (<=)

Eqv

Addition and subtraction (+,-)

Greater than or Equal to (>=)

Imp

String concatenation (&)

Like

Is


When multiplication and division occur together in an expression, each operation is evaluated as it occurs from left to right. Likewise, when addition and subtraction occur together in an expression, each operation is evaluated in order of appearance from left to right.

The string concatenation operator (&) is not an arithmetic operator, but in precedence it does fall after all arithmetic operators and before all comparison operators. Similarly, the Like operator, while equal in precedence to all comparison operators, is actually a pattern-matching operator. The Is operator is an object reference comparison operator. It does not compare objects or their values; it checks only to determine if two object references refer to the same object.

See Also

^ Operator, * Operator, / Operator, \ Operator, Mod Operator, + Operator,
- Operator, & Operator, And Operator, Eqv Operator, Imp Operator, Not Operator, Or Operator, Xor Operator, Is Operator, Like Operator.