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Home/ Questions/Q 6581669
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T16:10:58+00:00 2026-05-25T16:10:58+00:00

int main() { int x = 6; x = x+2, ++x, x-4, ++x, x+5;

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int main() {
   int x = 6;
   x = x+2, ++x, x-4, ++x, x+5;
   std::cout << x;
}

// Output: 10

int main() {
   int x = 6;
   x = (x+2, ++x, x-4, ++x, x+5);
   std::cout << x;
}

// Output: 13

Please explain.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T16:10:59+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 4:10 pm

    Because , has lower precedence than =. In fact, , has the lowest precedence of all operators.

    First case:

    x=x+2,++x,x-4,++x,x+5;
    

    This is equivalent to

    (x=x+2),(++x),(x-4),(++x),(x+5);
    

    So, x becomes 6+2 = 8, then it is incremented and becomes 9. The next expression is a no-op, that is x-4 value is calculated and discarded, then increment again, now x is 10, and finally, another no-op. x is 10.

    Second case:

    x=(x+2,++x,x-4,++x,x+5);
    

    This is equivalent to

    x=((x+2),(++x),(x-4),(++x),(x+5));
    

    x+2 is calculated, then x is incremented and becomes 7, then x - 4 is calculated, then x is incremented again and becomes 8, and finally x+5 is calculated which is 13. This operand, being the rightmost one, is the taken as the result of the whole comma expression. This value is assigned to x.
    x is 13.

    Hope it’s clear.

    And, as one of the comments suggests –

    NEVER WRITE CODE LIKE THIS

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