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Home/ Questions/Q 6638369
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T23:25:40+00:00 2026-05-25T23:25:40+00:00

Possible Duplicate: Safety concerns about short circuit evaluation What does the standard say about

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Possible Duplicate:
Safety concerns about short circuit evaluation

What does the standard say about evaluating && expressions – does it guarantee that evaluation of parameters will stop at the first false?

E.g.:

Foo* p;
//....
if ( p && p->f() )
{
    //do something
}

is the f() guaranteed not to be called if p == NULL?

Also, is the order of evaluation guaranteed to be the order of appearence in the clause?

Might the optimizer change something like:

int x;
Foo* p;
//...
if ( p->doSomethingReallyExpensive() && x == 3 )
{
    //....
}

to a form where it evaluates x==3 first? Or will it always execute the really expensive function first?

I know that on most compilers (probably all) evaluation stops after the first false is encountered, but what does the standard say about it?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T23:25:40+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 11:25 pm

    What does the standard say about evaluating && expressions – does it guarantee that evaluation of parameters will stop at the first false?

    Yes. That is called short-circuiting.

    Also, is the order of evaluation guaranteed to be the order of appearence in the clause?

    Yes. From left to right. The operand before which the expression short-circuited doesn’t get evaluated.

    int a = 0;
    int b = 10;
    if ( a != 0 && (b=100)) {}
    
    cout << b << endl; //prints 10, not 100
    

    In fact, the above two points are the keypoint in my solution here:

    • Find maximum of three number in C without using conditional statement and ternary operator
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