add some origin

This commit is contained in:
Amin by
2014-06-05 11:01:37 +08:00
parent b3bbfea7be
commit e9236905c1

View File

@ -8,4 +8,84 @@ Unlike C, Swift lets you perform remainder (%) calculations on floating-point nu
This chapter describes the common operators in Swift. Advanced Operators[…]” This chapter describes the common operators in Swift. Advanced Operators[…]”
Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/cn/jEUH0.l Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/cn/jEUH0.l
“Terminology
Operators are unary, binary, or ternary:
Unary operators operate on a single target (such as -a). Unary prefix operators appear immediately before their target (such as !b), and unary postfix operators appear immediately after their target (such as i++).
Binary operators operate on two targets (such as 2 + 3) and are infix because they appear in between their two targets.
Ternary operators operate on three targets. Like C, Swift has only one ternary operator, the ternary conditional operator (a ? b : c).”
Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/cn/jEUH0.l
“The values that operators affect are operands. In the expression 1 + 2, the + symbol is a binary operator and its two operands are the values 1 and 2.
Assignment Operator
The assignment operator (a = b) initializes or updates the value of a with the value of b:
let b = 10
var a = 5
a = b
// a is now equal to 10
If the right side of the assignment is a tuple with multiple values, its elements can be decomposed into multiple constants or variables at once:
let (x, y) = (1, 2)
// x is equal to 1, and y is equal to 2
Unlike the assignment operator in C and Objective-C, the assignment operator in Swift does not itself return a value. The following statement is not valid:
if x = y {
// this is not valid, because x = y does not return a value
}
This feature prevents the assignment operator (=) from being used by accident when the equal to operator (==) is actually intended. By making if x = y invalid, Swift helps you to avoid these kinds of errors in your code.
Arithmetic Operators
Swift supports the four standard arithmetic operators for all number types:
Addition (+)
Subtraction (-)
Multiplication (*)
Division (/)
1 + 2[…]”
Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/cn/jEUH0.l
“Unlike the arithmetic operators in C and Objective-C, the Swift arithmetic operators do not allow values to overflow by default. You can opt in to value overflow behavior by using Swifts overflow operators (such as a &+ b). See Overflow Operators.
The addition operator is also supported for String concatenation:
"hello, " + "world" // equals "hello, world"
Two Character values, or one Character value and one String value, can be added together to make a new String value:
let dog: Character = "🐶"
let cow: Character = "🐮"
let dogCow = dog + cow
// dogCow is equal to "🐶🐮"
See also Concatenating Strings and Characters.
Remainder Operator
The remainder operator (a % b) works out how many multiples of b will fit inside a and returns the value that is left over (known as the remainder).
NOTE
The remainder operator (%) is also known as a modulo operator in other languages. However, its behavior in Swift for negative numbers means that it is, strictly speaking, a remainder rather than a modulo operation.
Heres how the remainder operator works. To calculate 9 % 4, you first work out how many 4s will fit inside 9:
You can fit two 4s inside 9, and the remainder is 1 (shown in orange).
In Swift, this be written as:
9 % 4 // equals 1
To determine the answer for a % b, the % operator calculates the following equation and returns remainder as its output:
a = (b × some multiplier) + remainder
where some multiplier is the largest number of multiples of”
Excerpt From: Apple Inc. “The Swift Programming Language.” iBooks. https://itun.es/cn/jEUH0.l