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Home/ Questions/Q 510969
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T07:10:06+00:00 2026-05-13T07:10:06+00:00

For example this: var a = 123; var b = a++; now a contains

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For example this:

var a = 123;
var b = a++;

now a contains 124 and b contains 123

I understand that b is taking the value of a and then a is being incremented. However, I don’t understand why this is so. The principal reason for why the creators of JavaScript would want this. What is the advantage to this other than confusing newbies?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T07:10:06+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:10 am

    That’s why it’s called the “post-incrementing operator”. Essentially, everything is an expression which results in a value. a + 1 is an expression which results in the value 124. If you assign this to b with b = a + 1, b has the value of 124. If you do not assign the result to anything, a + 1 will still result in the value 124, it will just be thrown away immediately since you’re not “catching” it anywhere.

    BTW, even b = a + 1 is an expression which returns 124. The resulting value of an assignment expression is the assigned value. That’s why c = b = a + 1 works as you’d expect.

    Anyway, the special thing about an expression with ++ and -- is that in addition to returning a value, the ++ operator modifies the variable directly. So what happens when you do b = a++ is, the expression a++ returns the value 123 and increments a. The post incrementor first returns the value, then increments, while the pre incrementor ++a first increments, then returns the value. If you just wrote a++ by itself without assignment, you won’t notice the difference. That’s how a++ is usually used, as short-hand for a = a + 1.

    This is pretty standard.

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